"b3baa5a3-6daf-4f9a-bc48-96eb4f1876d9"@en . "CONTENTdm"@en . "2017-03-07"@en . "1884-10-18"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/dbc/items/1.0346379/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " Govern mont Gomu.\n'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nTHE BRITISH COLUMBIAN\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0080\u0094IB PUBLIllilD\t\nEven Wednesday & Saturday,\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 BT\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nD. ROBSON & CO.\nOFFICE, COLUMBIA STREET. EHTIAKK TO Hi-\nt0rialandbu9ihe8s depmtiknt thioooh t. r.\nP\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00BBjok*C-.|. Book * Stationery Store.\n,1 totSmm.! p.j.H\u00C2\u00AB In kiruiei. Sallsmd\nby drier or Ag.nt, \u00C2\u00BB1 psr qnsrtor, pay.til.\nquarterly to Carrier or Agent.\nAOENTS\nT. H. Hiiim k Co. Victoria.\nT. R. PlAslOK 4 Co You.\nL. P. FISHES AdTstttllsg Agont, 21 Hsrolunl's\nKxchsngo, Son Francisco, tsanttiorlsed to receive\nAdvertisement, for tht. paper. '\nNewspaper AuTertl,fng Unrest. (USprneo St.),\nwhore advertising contract, insy be mode for It Ir\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0- lhe gltitiah (ffohtmbian.\nBaturday Honing. Ocl. 18. 1804.\ncurrent Events and Opinions*\nRussia hiB resolved to develop\nher system of railway communication on an enormous scale, and for\nthis purpose haa juat contracted a\nloan of $76,000, to be expended dining the next. few years. India has\nalready built lines of railway 'penetrating the furthest provinces. Australia has also made long strides in\nthe same direction. Next in order\nis the Argentine Confederation, in\nSouth America, which is building\nfour additional trunk lines of railroad at a cont of $28,000,000, to\nconnect Buenos Ayres, her principal\nseaport, with the vast granaries\nopening up in the pampas of the interior. In every case tho ultimate\npurpose is to overcome all impediments-iu reaching the central grain\nmarkets of Europe. Anil, in spite\nof all this, American grain speculators continue tlieir efforts to artificially maintain the price of wheat,\nas though there were a great deficiency in the supply of the world,\nand the nations would have eventually to come to them begging the\nprivilege of being allowed to pur-\ncase some of their surplus.\u00E2\u0080\u0094British\nTrade Journal\nThe cholera in a period of less\nthan four months hns slain 13,000\njteraona in Europe. The pestilence\nfirat appeared in the French cities\nupon tho Mediterranean, but nearly\none-half of the deaths have occurred\nin tho province of Naples. Filth\nand the ignorance of the people\nbave been the great feeders of the\ndisease. In the last week the plague\nhas appeared in three additional departments of France, and is daily\nthreatening Paris. The River Seine\nis stated to be in a horrible condition,\nand the pestilence is bound to thrive\nalong its route,. We in Canada,\nbeing so far away from tlie countries\nwhich are being ravaged, lmvo largely\nrecovered from the first shook of the\nannouncement of tho appearance of\ncholera at Toulon and Marseilles,\nbut another summer will arrive in\ndue time, and it is not improbable\nwe may yet experience some of the\nhorrors now convulsing France,\nSpain, Italy, and especially Naplos.\nIb is the duty of governments and\nmunicipal authorities all over the\ncontinent to relax none of. their\nvigilance to prevent its appearance\namong us, and none of their preparations for its reception should it\nappear,\u00E2\u0080\u0094Globe,\nSome remarkable changes in the\ndistribution of i the races are being\nmarked in the United States. The\nnew England \"States which were\noriginally almost true Briton in race\nand .strongly Protestant in religion\nare rapidly and surely becoming monopolized bythe Irish and French\nCanadian races with of course a prevailing Roman Catholic religion. It\nis in Utah of atl places in the world\nthat the pure British are especially\nstrong. New York is becoming\nIrish and German, and Wisconsin\nlargely the latter. In nil the north\nwestern States the Germans aro a\natrong section of tho population.\nTho Scandinavians are to be found\naide by s,ide with their Teutonic\nneighbors on this continent as well\nas in Europe. Dakotah and Minnesota are strongly Anglo Canadian\nand the south and south-western\nStates laigely colored; and Pennsylvania is overwhelmingly native horn\nIn its populutigtt. The Pacific slope\nhas as all know obtained a Chinese\ncomplexion. If we except the Chinese and colorod peoplo the United\nStates presents to day pretty muoh\ntbe same problem to tho thoughtful\nobserver that England did eight\nhundred years ago. She waB then a\ncountry peopled with diverse nationalities, with a strong native element\nof Anglo-Saxon atock with whom\nthe Celts had blended. Will the\nproblem In the United States be settled from un ethnological standpoint\nas satisfactorily as it was in England T The Chinese and colored contingents place a veto upon an affirma\ntivo atrnwar; but there is n strong\nhope tbat the other nationalities will\nblend, and that tho Anglo-Saxon\nstook will bo the predominant complexion. German women, it is true,\nhave strong national matrimonial\nprejudices, but German men, accord\ning to an eminent American authority, \"prefer wives of -other nationalities than their own.\" If we turn\nto the Scandinavians, the reverse is\ntho case; and \"the affinity between\nScandinavian women and men of\nother races is greater than betweon\nGerman women und men of other\nraces,\" In this disposition to mingle\nthe ruoes lies the hope of the great\nAmerican lepublio, because it is only\nby unison of iflco that the unison of\nthe republic is permanently possible.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Ottatoa Free Prm,\nThe British Columbian.\nVOLUME 26\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B. 0\u00E2\u0080\u009E SATURDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1884.\nNUMBER 31\nSea Weeds.\nO call us not weeds; we are ocean's gay\nflnwers,\nFor lovely and bright and gay tinted are\nwe,\nAnd quito independent of sunshine and\nBhowers. ..-L^\nThuii call ub not weeds; wo are ocean's\ngay flowers.\nNot nursed like tbe plants in a summer\nparterre, ,\nWhoro gales aro bat sighs of an evening\nair.\nOur exquisite, fragile and delicate fonns\nAre nursed by the ocean and rooked by\nthe storms.\nAn Amphibious Race.\nAn interesting account has been giv-\n011,111 the \"Transactions of the Anthropological Society of Wasjiioglim\" of a\ntribe called Innvits, who inhabit the\ncoast of Alaska frum Cape Jfewenham\nnearly to Bristol Bay. The people are\nof an amphibians nature, and present\nsomo striking features in their economy which seem to put at defiance all\nrecognized sanitary laws. The houses\nare built so close to the sea that storms\nand high tides frequently inundate\nthein, compelling the inhabitants to\nhuddle together on the roofs, sometimes for whole days at the timo.\nTheir usual home, however, is their\nskin-boat, or \"kink,\" in the manage*\nment of which even the very young\nchildren are perfect proficients. Iu\nfact, the kiak is the peripatetic home\nof the tribe, and it is much moro useful tban an ordinary boat, inasmuch aa\nwhen overtaken by a storm the kink is\nrun ashore and turned over on ita side,\nbo that the whole family can sleep under it. Ono peculiarity of the Innvits\nis that as long as the head ia sholtered\nthe rest of the body protrudes unclothed from beneath the kiak, and\nthe appearance of a sea beach where\nfour or five hundred families may be\nseen with their limbs all radiating from\nthe kinks but their heads and shoulders invisible, is perfectly unique. To\ninure the body to exposure of all kinds\nis the ohief education of a young Inn-\nvitt, and no excuse is allowed on the\npart of the old people, who are very\nsevere disciplinarians. The use of\nwater externally is unknown, for they\nnover bathe or wash their bodies, the\ncleansing process, such ns it is, being\nonly resorted to occasionally, when the\nmen light a fire in the Kashima, or\ncouncil-house, nnd jump about until\nthey are in a profuse perspiration.\nThey thon apply urino to their oily\nskin and rub it into n lather, after\nwhioh they take a plunge into the\nriver. It is singular, however, that\nwith such dirty habits they keep their\nweapons and boats scrupulously clean,\nalthough tbey eat their food uncooked.\nWhat water they do drink ia taken by\npreference from stagnant pools, where\nthe fish are oleanod and offal Ib thrown\nin; and when they go tosea, frequently for days at a time, they never take\nfrosh water with them, but prefer to\ndrink sea-water. Dirt aud hardship\naro common factors in the lives of savage races, but the faot of systematically drinking salt wator with impunity\nia an unparalleled feature.\nA Big* Shot.\n(Santa Cruz Sentinel.)\nProbably thelargoatpioceof mountain\never romovod in this state at one shot\nwas'that whioh was removed a mile\nand a half above Felton Sunday laat.\nAt least 1200 poople wore on the surrounding hills to witness the sight,\nThore wore 30,000 cubio yards of\nbluff to be removed. This was covered with trces'that have been thero\nfur ages; rocks that have stood tho\nravages of time for decades) brush\nthat had become a solid moss defying\ntho pickax to remove. To fulfil the\ncontract and have tho road completed\niu a certain number of days looked\nlike a losing proposition to J. J.\nCummings, the contractor, in view of\nthis groat obstacle,\nM. C. Hyland, who knows as much\nwhat powder can do as aity man ou\nthe coast, nnd Mr. Oummiugs, thought\nthat the best way to solve tho problem wob to blast it. Everything was\nready Sunday, and faithfully Cummings and Hyland worked to get\neverything in proper shape. A tunnel fifty feet long was run into the\nmountain and formed into a T. Tho\npowder was put in three magnxines\nTho horizontal lino wus divided off\ninto sections. On the right wing,\nforty feet long, wore placed two magazines, as tho weight of tho bluff rested on this side, On the end of the\nother wing was a solitary magazino.\nThoy were connected by a battery\nsixty feot in the rear of tho mountain. A wire extended down the hillside and connected with the inagnsinos,\nforming an electric current. At 5:05\np. m. .1. F. Cunningham and J, W.\nHanson aet off the blast. So Instantaneous wns it that the loading wire\nbroke away from tho battery without\ncarrying it along. Tho bluff upheaved\nand tall trees nnd hug* rocks went\nholter-skeltor, like a lot of school boys,\nfrom the mountain side into the\nriver, amid the cheers of the spectators, For an instant the great muss\nformed a dam and impeded the progress of the river and forced it into an\nold channel.\nFour thousand and five hundred\nSounds of powder were placed in the\nrift and aid the work so completely\nthat not a particle of sand, rook, redwood or piap was left tu show what\nBoomed a rock of Gibraltar a few moments beforo.\nThe shock shattered windows in Fel-\n' ton and was heard in this oity.\nFour thousand pounds of powder\nblasted eleven tall redwood trees so\ncompletely last week that the limbs\nfell from them before the trunks\ntouched the around. The grading of\nthe road will he completed within forty\ndays. The bluff was 144 feet in\nheight.\n \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00BB, \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nDr. Hammond, of New York, has\nadviaod ladies who wish to be beautiful to eat mutton. Advice of this\nkind to New York women ought to be\nat a premium. The prico of sheep\nmay bo oxpected to rise.\nm II. MATHERS, M. 1>.\nOffice\u00E2\u0080\u0094Temporarily in Wise's building,\nFront Btreet.\nKESiDKNt'K-Ht. John street, opposite tlie\nFub|loSchool, New Westminster.\nmliir\u00C2\u00BB-tc\nC,\nN. TREW, Rl. D, BI. C. P. A \u00C2\u00A7., O.\nPHYSICIAN A 8UUGEON.\nSurgeon B. C. Penitentiary, Surgeon New\nWestminster -Tall, Coroner tor the District. Office--Corner of Clarkson and\nMcKenzie Streets. Residence, Mary St.\nse-llt-tc\nT\BS. HmoLEOD * MacSWAIN.\nXJ PHYSICIANS & SUKOEONS.\nOfflA, Columbia st., opposite City Hotel.\nOfllce always open, day and night.\nArch. MacLeod, H, A.. M. T)\u00E2\u0080\u009E C. M. (Mc-\nGill), formerly of New York Polyclinic,\nA, MacSwain, M. D. (Harvard), Licentiate of ltoyal College of Physicians, Lon*\ndob, Eng, myll-tc\nH\nH. COOPER, B. A., M. \u00C2\u00BB.,\nPHYSICIAN A SURGEON.\nOFFICE and RESIDENCE-Church St,\n(next door to Farmers' Homo), near\nColumbia St., Now Westminster, B.C.\nOFFICE HOURS-8to 10a.m.; Ito8and\n00 to 8 p, m, Calls In town and conn-\ntry promptly attended to. fe2to\nJOHN 8. McGUIRE, M. D.,\nPHYSICIAN A SURGEON.\nGraduate of Trinity College, Dublin, as\nnlso Assistant Surgeon late Honorable\nEast India Company Service, -wishes to\nannounce to the people of Lillooet District that ho has tnkon up his residence\nat CLINTON and opened n drug store. All\ncommutations by mall promptly attended to. myl7-flm\nDR. CIIEADLE,\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0DENTIST,\nAssociated wltl. Dr. Welsh, enn bo found\nnt his offlco, over D. S, Curtis & Co.'s drug\nstore, Columbia street, Now Westminster.\nOfflce hours-From B n.m. to 12 m., and\nfrom 1 to 5 p.in. Je2Me.\npORBOVLD * MoCOLL,\nBARRISTERS, SOLICITOUS, AC.\nOffice\u00E2\u0080\u0094McKenzie street, New Westminster, B. C,\nAMERICAN AGRICULTURIST.\n100 columns and 100 engravings In\neach Issue. 4!trd Year. *I.IHt a Yenr.\nSend two 3c U. S. stamps for sample\ncopy [English or Gorman] of the Oldest\nnnHO,'l*IOSri I'innml bo bent In Ibis oily\nlor quality or prices.\nOlvo bin) A cnl! nml Jiuliro lor yourselves,\ntittle\nTltXAJPSXja Xs-BA.jP\nSALOON.\nHAVING PimOHASEn THIS WELL-\nknown Million, on Columbia strep!,\nwo lien to Hiinoiiiico tlmt we shnll lio Bind\nto soo nil onrolil Irlnnils.\nso24to Hl'KAY A CUltltlE.\nR. T. WILLIAMS,\nB'\nOOK BINDKK, PAI-RR RULER,\nand Blank Book Manufacturer.\nMaps ami Drawing Paper Mounted.\nFile, of Magazines, Illustrated Papers,\nct i., neatly and cheaply Bound.\n(iovornment Street, Victoria, B. 0.\nThis Association merits the\nconfidence the Public is reposing in it from the following\nFACTS:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nflic Security offered to policy holders Is\nuiumrpaused by any Company doing bunt-\nncKs In Canada.\nIt has no schemes of Insurance, hut the\nwell-established lines, hence the polioy\nholders cannot he misted as to their contracts.\nIts statements to the public can be readily understood, Its cash statement show-\nInn every Item of Income nnd how expended.\nIts position Is ascertained annually from\na detailed valuation In which every Item\nof liability Is Included.\nIts progrcHH has been unexampled lu\nthe history of Insurance In Canada.\nIts policies nro Indtsniitable after three\nyears, and non-forfcltaule after two ycarB'\nexistence.\nlis profits nre distributed upon an equitable oasis. The profits to one clnss of\npolicy holders aro not lessened to give\nlarger profits to any other class, which\ninetliodiiiTimU superior advantages over\nthe uniform bonus plan of distribution,\nLiberal I'ondltlttR as It Mculdrnte and\nTravel.\nJ. K. MacDONALD,\nManaging Director.\nT. R. PEARSON & GO.\nAgents, New Westminster.\nje7-2mo-nlternate.\nCOME AND SEE\nTHE PHOPRIETOR. JAMES TUEN-\nBUI.Ij, hnving again taken possession\nof tho 1'KHPKBANCE HOUSE fronting on\nColumbia mid Church Streets, opposite\nEpiscopal Church, City of New Westminster, I). C, and now known as the\nFARMER'S HOME,\"\nWill accommodate all his old friends and\ntho public generally who favor him with\na call, at old prices. Hoard per dny, 91.00;\nBoard por week, $5.00; Single Meals, 25\ncents; Beds, 25 cents, ftarGood accommodation for Lndies nnd Families. nu29te\nFresh Cranberries\nPUT UP IN\nBarrels of 25 Imp. Gallons,\n1-2 Barrels of 1% Imp. Gallons,\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B. C.\nKYLE & TILTON,\nFRONT STREET,\nNew Westminster.\nWALSH'S\nTailoring\nEmporium\nOpposite the Bank, Columbia street,\nNew Westminster, B. C. [my20-tc.\n. i iu J\n DEALERS IN-\nBOOKS,\nSTATIONERY,\nFancy Goods, &c,\nYALE, B. O.\nA1.AROK STOCK ALWAYS ON\nhand. Ooods not in stock will he\nordered promptly.\nNewspapers end Magazines supplied from nll parts of the world.\nPrompt attention given to orders by\nmail,\nJnatfl A. O. JOHNSTON, Manager.\n-ROYAL CITY-\nWOODS \u00C2\u00A3 TURNER,\nOozvtreye.io.cexu,\nleal Estate Ageats, Land Bnrveyers.\nDraughtsmen, md insurance Agents.\nOur property lists ue now very eoinplete, and we would call attention to the\nfollowing selections, which we are enabled to offer at very reasonable figures.\nTitles guaranteed:\nNew Westminster City.\nLot 20, block XXXII\u00E2\u0080\u0094good residence\nlite.\nSubdivision of lot 10, block XXXV**\n60x132 feet.\nSouthwest i of lot 17, block XXXVI.\nNew Westminster Suburbs,\nLots 7 and 8, blook V\u00E2\u0080\u0094jtruled, cleared\nand fenced; odjoiutllg residence of 'V. 11.\nTownsend, Esq,\nlot. 118 and 70, Mock V.\nSubdivisions of lots I and \u00E2\u0080\u00A2', block 0.\nSubdivisions of lots 10 and ll, block 7.\nNew Westminster Distriot.\nGood farms in all parts.\n165 acres on False Creek road.\n450 acres at Matsqui\u00E2\u0080\u0094gooddairyfamt;\nhighly improved; to be sold with itock\naim implements if desired.\nSOO acres at Sumas\u00E2\u0080\u0094a splendid chance\nfor dairy fanners.\n245 acres near Ladnor's Landing.\n320 acres on Lulu Island.\nPort Moody.\nA largo and complete list, embracing\nall parte of the Townsite.\nLand Surveying\nIn all its branches; maps compiled, tno.'\niugs prepared, and all descriptions of surveying carefully and promptly attended\nto. SO'years'experience.\nHaving been over almost the whole of\nXew Westminster District daring our\nsurveying tours, we are in a position to\ngive intending purchasers a correct description of the property offered.\nMouoy to lend on approved security at\nlow rates of interest,\nAgents For\nThe Phenix, of Brooklyn, and the\nLiverpool k London ft Glow Insurance\nCompanies,\nThe Equitable Life Assurance Society\nof tho United States.\nGladding, McBcan k Co's terra cotta\nchimneys' and vitrified stone sewer\npiping.\t\nOFFICE-KllanTs Block, Columbia\nStreet, New Westminster,\napl 2 to\nWOODS k TURNER.\nCOMPANY, LIMITED,\nRichard Street,\nWU UME. fi. C.\u00C2\u00AB\nMANUFACTURERS AKD DEALERS\nIN ALL KINDS OF\nROUGH AND DRESSED\nLWFER\nShingles,\nShakes,\nLaths,\nPickets,\n*\nNet Floats, Trays\nAND ALL KINDS OF\nWood Furnishing for\nCanneries,\nDoors.\nWindows,\nBlinds.\nFrames.\nMouldings.\nBrackets.\nRailings.\nBalusters.\nNewels,\nPlain k Finer * \u00C2\u00AB\" Kinds of\nTURNED WORK.\nThe Only Fire-Proof\nin tbe City,\nTHE HIT IWfflNT\nIS UNDER THE CHARGE OF AN\nEXPERIENCED ARTIST.\nget \u00C2\u00A7alt ot 1&o Stat,\nFOB SALE.\nQEVEN WK8T-CLASB WORK OXE*.\nH0810 UkIIECK MUOH.\nFOB SALE.\nrilVE SHADE AYIiSHIBE HEiril\nr cuivcs,aiiiromnntaiMi.<.r Ilr*t*cla*a laud, well adapts]\nfor farming, and especially adapted far\ngrazing purposes. Fine chance. Tarns\neasy. Parties are Invited to call and in*\nspoctci-op; jiyifu\nTHK UNDERSIGNED BEGS LEAVE\nto announce to the Public tbat he\nhas purchased the above Hotel, where\neverything will be found first-class, and\nat reasonable rates.\nThe Parlors and Sleeping Apart-\nmeiU are under the superintendence\nof Mrs. Austin,\nPrivate Dining Rooms tor Ladies,\nFamilies and Private Parties.\nA Private Beading Room, commodious, comfortably furnished, aud\nwell supplied with bookB and papers, is\nprovided for the use of guests.\nIb supplied with the choicest brands of\nWines, Liqcobs, Cigars, kc.\nJNO. AUSTIN,\nProprietor.\nTHE\nHASTINGS, B. I.\nTHIS FINE AND COMMODIOUS\nnew Hotel has buen recently com*\npleted and is furnished with every convenience for the comfort of guests. The\nsituation and accommodations arc unsurpassed on Burrard Inlet, which has become the most fashionable\nWATERING PLACE\nIn British Columbia. The prospect is\ncharming, the sea breezes are invigorating, and the facilities for bathing and\nboating are excellent. Private Bitting\nand Dining Rooms. Suites of apartments for families or parties. Tlie Bar\nis entirely detatehed from the main\nbuilding.\nAT The Hotel is under the immediate\nsuperintendence of Mrs. Black.\nFirst-class stabliug and feed for Horses, Busses to and from New Westminster twice a day.\nGEO. BLACK,\njy28tc Proprietor.\nFURNITURE I\nTHE UNDERSIGNED HAS FLEA-\nsure In announcing that he is now\nprepared to supply all kinds of Furniture, kc., at the lowest possible prices.\nCabinet work and Upholstering done\npromptly and in first-class style;\nUNDERTAKING\nIn all its branches. The undersigned\nhas the only HEARSE in the City. A\ncontinuance of public patronage solicited.\nOld stand, next Occident Hotel.\nJ. G. BUNTE,\nLate Manager Soul's i Branch Furniture\nStore, au5tc\nO. R. & N. CO.\nITIHK STEAMER\n\"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0ed-aLec\u00C2\u00A9-\nWill run betwofln\nCiillhitfiU PortTownsvml, Honlllo.\nmul liiKTiiu'illiite Ports,\nus follows:\nIiavi T\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00ABw\u00C2\u00AB mn SumwY n I >. a. miwih\nn Ktw WtmuMTu Tutiuv Mommo.\nIn.! Nm Wiitwiiitu inn WcMtituw \u00C2\u00AB\nt \u00C2\u00AB.\u00C2\u00AB., MINIM at TstOKs THIIMMV bFTH-\nHO0H.\nREDUOTION OF FARES.\nNew Wutmwitii to rm TowmmD, I..00\nsi.nii, \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 e.oe\nTsoOMa, \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 6.00\nSOMO O. E. CLANCEY, Asjent.\nsoiaio\nESTABLISHED 1859.\nROBT. DICKINSON,\nBUTChlER,\nHcarly Opposite lhe Colonial Hotel,\nNEW WESTMINSTER.\nTHK LARGEST AND CHOICEST\nassortment of all descriptions of\nMEATS AND VEGETABLES.\nConstantly on hand, and supplied to Families, Restaurants, anil Steamboats at tbe\nLOWEST POSSIBLE TRICES.\nFARM FOR SALE.\ni-kPPOSITE CHILUWHACK LANDING\nKJ on tlie noith side of Fraser rivtr,\nWell Improved; good orchard; \u00C2\u00ABQ (ralt\ntrees; a fine lotofsmall fruit; )\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 aeres la\ntimothy: good house, nnd barn. For further particulars apply either hy letter mt\nperson to\nK. C. GARNER,\nJlyWto Johnson's Landing, B.O.\nrOR BAM.\nA A FIB8T~0LAiW DAIRY\nCuiUihrl \"nmnf. ^nmi* a; of*lai \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nprnirie, 170 fenced, 65 aeres In neadow;\nitwelllni* hnune nf 7 rooms; aiOoddaln*\niind commodious hum and outbaildlnr*\nThere Is a aood orchard of choice fruit\nbearlni\nIKOC\nWl\niii be sold ~wftn\"or without\nstock, Implements and hay. A\nau28*te\nFOR SALE.\nW. II. KEARY\nWishes to dispose of his AfattMScrj* aat\nBook M\u00C2\u00ABre nnd the good will of the business. TEHJIS EASY* whieh can be ob*\ntallied ou application (o T. J. Armstrong.\nMnreh 51st, 1681. - - ap2*te.\nFOR SALE.\nPer Cent. Less thai GmL\nDry Goods, BootslSfioes\nWell adapted fer a country Store.\nOne-half cash; balance ou time.\nApply nt\nselOtc OFFICE OF THIS PAPER.\nFOR_SALE.\n1440 ACRES CHOICE\nDELTA LANDS\n3 MILES FROM LADNER'S\nLanding, on the Trunk Wagon\nRoad; two other roads ronningtliroiigli\nthe premises. Apply to\nE. A. WADHAMS,\nde22tc Ladner's Landlnc.B.C.\nSECOND-HAND\nEnkJorSalt!\nCYLINDER 8xn, SUITABLE\nfor direct action Saw-mill! with-\nSaw Arbor and two 62 inch Spafdlng-\ntooth Saws; also, feed sear, donkey\npump, and shell boiler. The whole is\nin good order, and may be seen at the\nBrunette Saw-mill. Will be sold at 1\nbargain. Apply to\nDeBECK BROS. & CO. --.\nNew West., 20th Dec., 188*. [deiitc\nzsrcriOsEL\nla Ike Estate of Cea. raiksaa, Atttutt\ntBlClUtf*.\nALL PERSONS INDEBTED TO THB\nabove Estate are required to settle\nsuch indebtedness forthwith; andallper*\nsons having claims against the said Estate must send In proved accounts on or\nbefore the 8th November next,\nHated Sth October, 1881.\nE. A. JENNS.\noolltd Administrator.\nLARGE SALE\n-OF-\n100 HEAD OF STOCK\nT\nAT LANGLEY.\nIO BE HOLD BY PI\u00C2\u00BBU< A1CTMK AT\nHenry Wtirk's farm. Langley, on\nWednesday, the Mid or October,\nHis entire stock, with that of the Hudson\nBuy Co., coiiKist iiiR of about GO head of fat\ncattle\u00E2\u0080\u0094cows, young stcerc, heifers and\ncalves. The stock Th all In prime condition. Also, about t\u00C2\u00BB tons well saved Tlm*\nolhy Hay, in sheds.\nSix miii-lliK-ci-eillt will be given wrap-\nproved sennit*;. Parties buying the fat\nentile nnd hay vim have the use ol tbe\nsheds to winter them In, Hale to com\nmence nt 10o'clock, a m.\nA baud of 1IOHSKH will be sold at tht\nsame ttine. *\nT. J. TRAPP, Auctioneer.\nLaiiKley, 17th Sept., 1884. se!7td\nGUNS!\nRifles & Revolvers!\nBREECH-LOADING SHOT GUN8\nFrom $10.00 to J1SO.0O.\nBREEGH-LOADING RIFLES\nFromS5.00toK5.00.\nREVOLVERS\nFromSt.50toe25.00.\nSHOT, SHOT, SHOT,\nAll sites, from dust to 88 ball.\nEmtle-Dock t Cirtls t Hirre*\nninniond Sralr* Pnrtcr.\nHaving imported direct bom the tm-\ntory the largest stook of Guns, BUM uri\nRevolvers ever hold in this Provtuoe, I\ncan aud will sell cheaper than any other\nhonso in B. U., iind what WEBB sajs\nyou can rely on.\nMainland Gun Store,\nCOIUWIA IT., WW WIITMMITM.\nAn ImmenM steak .1 lf\u00C2\u00ABMsai Cm*,\nFmIm-i CMIrr; anal TaMtrulsIt- Ma*\ndries, and Fancy fieefls. auute NEW ADVERTISEMENTS THIS DAY.\nNotice.,..' J. H. Gillespie\nGeneral Merchandise.... A. Gutmnim\nNotice L. Wilson\nNurse Mra, Downey\nMusic. Miss MoBrido\nSpeoial. T. R. Poaraou & Co\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0Jhc $xiMi Colnmbian.\nttalnrday Morn Ina, Oct. IK, IHM.\nAn eastern paper remarks tliat\nGreat Britain is a country of marked\ncontrasts \u00E2\u0080\u0094 excessive wealth, tbe\nmoat abject poverty\u00E2\u0080\u0094lavish charitable endowments, extravagant outlays for sentiment Great as is hor\noutlay for charity it might be greater\nstill without overstepping tho bounds\nof prudence. When au Englishman\nean give $43,000 for u race horse, or\nbetween $43,000 aud $55,000 for\nan article of bed furniture or $30,-\n000 for a single book, it is little\nwonder that so many charitable institutions are springing up to divert\nsome portion of this useless expenditure into profitable channels.\nTtie Scotsman's special correspon\ndent, who accompanied the British\nAssociation to Canada, gives the\nfollowing opinion on the N. P:\n\"Striking a balance between the diverse opinions one hears, the general conclusion to be drawn is that\nprotection in Canada is doomed.\nThe only thing which can maintain\nit and keep Sir John Macdoimld's\nparty in power is what the Americans call a \"boom\" of great prosperity, when the protectionists could\n' point to the flourishing condition of\nthe Dominion as evidence of tha\nwisdom of their policy. Sir John\nMacdonald himself is said to be\ntired of the system. Ho seos that\nit is not a success, and thnt the advantages held out to the working\nclasses as certain to follow frum it\nhave not been realized. It has not\nfostered manufactures, those which\nwere started on the strength of the\nprotection policy finding an inadequate home demand, while they\nwere unable to compete with England in the markets of the world.\"\nIt has been shown by the London\nTimes that there are in India 49,-\n000,000 Hindoos and Mohammedans, under princes of their own,\nwho maintain armies numbering\n349,835 troops, with an artillery of\n4237 guns. In all the native states\na warlike spirit prevails, and the\ndiscipline and the weapons ure, as a\n. rule, excellent. The 100,000 soldiers of the Maharajah of Nepaul\nwould ask nothing better than to be\nled to battle, whoever the adversary,\nBefore the consolidation of the\nBritish dominion the troops were redoubtable antagonists to the best\nEuropean skill and discipline. Now\nthese soldiets are simply the toys\nof the princes. They have no\nduties to perform, for British rule\npreserves peace from the Himalayas\nto the ocean. But it is possible\nthat in tbe courso of time some sagacious and ambitious native prince\nmay unite these immense forces, resistance to which could not he offered\nby the comparatively insignificant\nnumber of soldiers undor Great\nBritain's control.\nnot safe for passenger traffic. From\ntho Mission up to Emory the road\nis in better condition, and a good\ndeal of this section has been ballasted. Still, tho temporary trestle\nwork at Harrison Kiver everybody\nkuows cannot bo safe for traffic,\nThe ditching is not at all sufficient\non tho lower section, where it is very\nimportant. Mr. Haney, after do\ndaring the road as well ballustcd as\nany on the continent, proceeds to\nstate a number of palpable absurdi.\nties which we have not now room to\nnotice. We shall return to the subject again, ami before we have exhausted it the publio may perhaps\narrive at the conclusion that the\nuccounts of railway accidents published iu thu mainland papers (by\nwliich he undoubtedly means The\nColumbian) were not much exag*\ngerated after all.\nMr. Haney's Report.\nWhile at Victoria some days ago\nMr. M. J. Haney, of the C. P. R.,\nwas interviewed by a representative\nof the Colonist to whom he made\nsome very extraordinary statements.\nIn another column wo publish the\nresult of this interview, not because\nit may be.accepted tis a reliable report of facts, but partly in order to\nshow how seriously a person in Mr.\nHaney's responsible position may\nmisrepresent and exaggerate for a\npurpose. Among other things, for\nexample, ho declares that the railway line between Port Moody and\nSpenco's Bridge is as well ballasted\nand oh easy running as any line on\nUio continent! We can scarcely bo-\nlievs that even Mr. Haney would be\nguilty of such a monstrous statement. If he is, he has been guilty\nof stating what is absolutely false,\nand it is not possible to believe that\nhe Is ignorant of the falsehood. The\nrailway from Port Moody toSpence's\nBridge is not finished at all. Some\nof li Is uot half finished, and a good\nileal has never been ballasted. The\nroad from Pott Moody to the Mission has been merely cut through\nsufficiently wide to admit of construction trains, and temporary embankments thrown up across the\nlow lands. These embankments\ngenerally (at Pitt Meadows, for example) are narrow, unprotected on\nthe sides, unballasted, and have\nnever been raised up to the height\nof the bridges, of which thero are\nMV'-ral across the sloughs. The\nbanks at Maplo Ridge and else\nwhere have never been sloped, as\nrequired bv the specifications, or pro*\ntooted by riprap, Tlie temporary\ntrestle work still supports the track\nta a great many places, aiid we have\nthe Authority of a practical engineer of high standing who lately went\nover thtt road for saying that it is\nTrusted Statesmen.\nIn a lato number of the North\nAmerican Review Professor Seeleye\nhus a very sensible aud able paper\non political morality which ought to\nbe read and studied by every politician and voter in the country.\nThere are three great statesmen\nwhose remarkable characteristics are\nspecially noted in this article\u00E2\u0080\u0094Lin\ncoin, Gladstone and Bismarck. Prof.\nSeeleye lays it down as a principle\nthat the first and most important\nquality in statesmanship is morality,\nand that it is' nob safo to confer a\ngreat trust upon nn impute man,\nHaving enunciated what he conceived to be the true principles of\nstatesmanship, the professor mentions the three men who, in his\nopinion, come very near his standard. \"Mr. Lincoln,\" he says, \"was\nconspicuous first of all for his hon*\nesty. 'Honest Abe Lincoln' wns\nthe fame ho early earned, and which,\nmore than any other characteristic,\ntirst commended him to the people.\nThat he Bhould do his duty, it wus\nonly necessary that he should know\nit; and his unerring knowledge\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nso spontaneously wise that it almost\nseemed an instinct\u00E2\u0080\u0094grew out of his\nunwavering loyalty to the right.\nHe knew few hooks; ho had no\nlarge acquaintance with men or history; he was no scholar; he was not\nbrilliant;; but he had a reverence for\nmen of whatever station, simply because they were men; ho looked up\nto the slave and looked down upon\nno man, and this gave bim more\nthan books, or learning, or brilliant\ngifts could have done, his rare political sagacity; and tbis more than all\nelse,.taught the people to commit\ntheir' interests to his guidance and\nto follow him with a loving trust\nwhich they have never given any\nleader before or since his time. His\npower lay most conspicuously in his\nmoral purpose. In his own words,\nwhich are likely to livo longer and\nbe quoted oftener than any words\nyet uttered in America, unless it be\nthe opening words of the Declaration of Independence\u00E2\u0080\u0094he that dedicated himself to the task, 'chat the\nnation shall under God have a new\nbirth of freedom, and thnt the government of the people, bythe people, and for the people shall not\nperish from the earth.' Mr. Gladstone iB trusted in Europe, and most\nof all in England, where he is known\nbest, for his unswerving moral pur*\npose. He is indeed a man very\ndifferent from Mr. Lincoln, He is\nlearned in books; he is a scholar; be\nis familiar with history; he has had\na careful study of difficult questions\nof finance; but in none of these\nways has he learned his statesmanship. The most prominent quality\nof his statesmanship is its high\nmoral ground. He would control\nnations as individuals should be\ncontrolled\u00E2\u0080\u0094by the highest moral\nprinciple, His aims in this respect\nsometimes seem too high to be attained, and he has not (infrequently\nbeen called unpractical in his views;\nbut he follows on unfalteringly, confronting questions more difficult\nthan any other statesman of the\npresent hour is forced to meet, but\nfacing them calmly, answering them\ncourageously, as his lofty moral\nprinciple directs, believing tbat\nnothing is ever settled till it is\nsettled right, and that right and\ntruth and love can settle all things.\nPrince Bismarck is a very different\nman from either of tho two named,\nbut he is like them both in tho commitment, of himself to a high claim\noutside himself, to which both he\nand Ills ngrandiziMiieiit have been\nsteadily subjected. From the timo\nwhen he was Prussian secretary, at\nthe Frankfort diet\u00E2\u0080\u0094as his letters\nlately published show\u00E2\u0080\u0094-he has seen\nthe need thut there' should be in\ncentral Europe, for the peace of the\nworld, a great united German power, and he has bent himself with\niion will to accomplish this. But\nbe has not sought it for himself,\nHe has not been charged with seek-\nii.g his owu profit, His unswerving purpose had its birth, and has\nhad its constant food, in bis un-\ndoubting religious faith. \"If I\nwere no longer a Christian,\" is his\nutterance, which wo need not doubt,\nsince all his life bears witness of its\ntruth, \"I would uot remain an\nhour at my post. If I did not believe in a divine order which has\ndestined this German nation for\nsomething good and great I would at\nonce give up the business of a diplomatist, or I would not have undertaken it. Orders and titles have no\ncharm for me. I owe the firmness\nwhich I have shown for ten years\nagainst all possible absurdities only\nto my decided faith. Take from\nme this faith, and you take from me\nmy fatherland,\" Some persons may\ndoubt the correctness of Prof. Seel-\neye's estimate of Bismarck's character, but there can be no doubt that\nhis ground is well taken and cannot\nbe successfully assailed.\nProperty belonging to the Ebenezer\nBrown estate for sale hy C. D. RAND,*\nMISS McBRIDE\nIs prepared to give\nLE880NS ON THE PIANOFORTE\nAlso, In VOCAL MUSIC,\nAt the roflldenceB of pupils. lsoclm\n* NURSE,\nRESPECTFULLY SOLICITS A SHARE\nof tlie patronage of the Lmlios of\nNow Westminster, Address,\nI'-oulm\nCare of MRS. MONOK,\nDouglas Street,\nTSTOTXCE.\nIn re lhe Estate of BENJAMIN II. WU-\nSON. IHwraaf-d,\nA LL PARSONS HAVING CLAIMS\nJ\. against the estate of the late Benjamin H. Wilson, nf Granville, are lierotiy\nrequest ml to send In their accounts to the\nundorsigned ou or before 20th Novomber,\n1884, uml all persons Indebted to tho above\nestato must pay their aooounta forthwith\nto LOUISA WILSON, of Granville,\nThe Executrix.\nDated Granville, Oot. II, 18S4.\noclGtd\nA. GUTMANN,\nDEALER IN\nGeneral Merchandise\nCOLUMBIA STREET,\nOp|). 4'nloiiltil Hotel, Sew Westminster.\nGuns, Ammunition,\nCigars, Tobacco, Candy,\nitiaBsciBAtrii px-p-bel\n1IIOUEST CASH PRICE PAI11 FOR AU.\nKINDS OF FURS.\nOOlStQ\nasroTiCB.\nNOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT\nilUdays after tlfttol Intend making\napplication to ihrt Chief Commissioner of\nI .mills und Works for permission to lease\nfor timbering purposes tho following described Intel* of land situate In Const\nDistrict:\nTract No. 1-Cominouctng at a stake sot\non Hiiswcll Point in Topaze Harbor,!hence\nnorth 80 chains; thonee wesl KM) chains;\nthenoe south to shore line of Tupaxe Harbor; thence easterly, following meandering*! of shore lino to point of commencement] containing 1280 acres, moro orless.\nTract No. 2\u00E2\u0080\u0094Commencing nt a stnko set\non shore line of Chancellor Channel,\nnbout 300 vurds southerly from .shorter\nPoint on Thurlow Island; thonco south\nsiu-l-uhis thence west UW ehalHsj thenee\nnorth tofrtion* line of (\u00E2\u0096\u00A0hiineellort.'lilinnel;\nthence easterly, following meanderlnn\nof shoreline to point of commencement;\nI'oiitiiliiln-,' 1280 acres, more or less.\nTract No. S\u00E2\u0080\u0094Commencing nt a stake set\non the north \"shore line of Cnrdoro channel, about due north of Green l'olnt;\nthence nortii 100 chains; thenoo oust MO\nchains; 1 hence south to shore line of Car-\ndcroc.hiuinel; thenco westerly, following\nmeiuidci-lims of shore lino to point of\ncommencement; cunt alu Ing S.W acres,\nmore or less.\nTract No. 4\u00E2\u0080\u0094Commonolng ail a stake sot\non north shoro line of Sunderland Channel, duo south of Hpnrks' (lone; thenee\nnorth So chains; (hence west liju chains:\nthonco south to shore line of Sunderland\nChannel: thonco westorly, following\nmeuiiderlngsuf shore tlne,to point of com*\nincncci-K'iit; containing lL-so aores, more\nor less. J. H. UILLEHjVIE,\nNew Westminster, 11. (.*., Oft. 17.1SSI.\nl&oclm\nTliodUtW*\ning fooling Of\nwoarlnoM, of\nTIRED OUT.\nexliiiuHlloii without effort, which makes life\na burden to so tunny poople, tu Ouo to ths\nfact that tho blood In poor, and the vitality\ni-oni-w-iu'iitly feeble. If yon nre suffering\nfrom such footings,\nAyer's Sarsaparilla\nla Just what you need, and will do yon Incalculable gootl.\nNo othor preparation so concentrates and\ncombines l.lniwl-purlfyliig, vitalising, enrich*\nIng,- ami invigorating qualities as AYKtt'i\nSABBAl'ABIIsLA,\npntll'AttKD 11Y\nDr.J.C.AyerACo., Lowell, Mais.\nSold by all Druggists; Sl.slx bottles fcf Ifc\nFashionable Sressmaking lliurjl\nMRS. DAVIDSON IS NOW FRBPAR*\ned to make dresses and execute mil-\nry in tho latest American and English\nstyles.\nUk\u00C2\u00BBiiienuk: \u00E2\u0080\u0094Quoon-H Avenue, below\nMr. Donne's, oolite\nSaleof City Reserves\n-totxci\u00E2\u0080\u0094\.\nrE SALE OP CITY RESERVES AND\nGardens will tuko place at the Court\nHouse Instead of tho Council Chambers,\nCity of New Westminster, on Monday. 'i*in\nOctober, at 11 o'clock In the forenoon.\nBy ordor, A, J. ALPORT,\nC. M. C.\nCity Clork's Oflico, Now Westminster,\nUtlt October, 1SSI. lfiocjt\na-TO-riog.\nTHE PARTNERSHIP HERETOFORE\nexisting botween William D. Ptirdy\nanil Thomas E. Henderson as Tlio and\nBrick Manufacturers haB this day boen\ndissolved by mutual consent. All debts\nduethe late Arm aro to be paid to-Thomas\nE. Henderson by whom alt liabilities will\nbe settled. Dated l;llb olior, IHKi.\nWILLIAM D. PURDY,\nlijoolm THOMAS E. HENDERSON,\nJust Opened Out\nAT-\nT. I Nil I HI\nSM Copies Rcaslde library.\nIncluding the Now Htylo,\nMoherlson's it-Ill Series.\nVory Complete Line of\nThe Pons, Various SO Ies*\nMnrk Twain's Experience, 1 bit.\nJob Lot of 26 cent Novels.\nRichardson's piano Instructor,\nUetse's Organ Instructor.\nSuperb fiong Book, JI,\nSong Folio, $1.\nT. R. PEARSON & CO.,\nHooks, Htntloiiury, and Music, Columbia\nstroet, Now Westminster,\nNewton A. Wliite,\nImporter aud Dealer In\nMen's, Youths', Boys'\nand Children's\nCLOTHING\nGENTLEMEN'S\nFurnishing Goods,\nHATS I CAPS,\nRubber Clothing\nUMBRELLAS, ETC.\n\u00C2\u00BBTHE BEST ASSORTMENT\n-OF-\nENTIRELY NEW OOODS\nIN THB OITY.\nCOLUMBIA STREET\nOpposite Rank of British Columbia.\noelSto\nNOTIOE.\nMAIE OF 1.AND ON MAINE ISLAND.\nXTOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, THAT\n111 the vacant portion ot the cast half of\nSection twelve, Mayne Island, will be offered for solo at public auction nt the upset\nprico of 82.50 por acre, at the Lands and\nWorks Ofllce, Victoria, at 12 o'clook noon\non Friday, 7th November noxt.\nWM. SMITHE,\nChief Com. of Lands A Works.\nLands and Works Department, Victoria,\nB. C. Uth October, 1684. oclfitd\nNOTICE,\nTHURSDAY, THE Oiu NOVEMBER\nhaving been set apurl and appointed\nbylllsExecllonoy tliu Governor General\nIn Council us n day of General Thanksgiving throughout the Dominion, tho public oftlees will be closed on that. day.\nBy Command.\nJNO. ROBSON,\nProvincial Secretary.\nProvincial Secretary's Office, oth October, 1881, , \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 lSt>c2t\nFjUMWIITER\nGOODS\nJUST HECEIVKD DY\nJAMES\nEllard & Co.\n20 CASES\nOF NEW AND FASHIONABLE\nDRYG00DS\nCONSISTING OK\nDRESS GOODS,\nIn all the latest sfcylea and shinies,\ncomprising Cashmere, Frenoh Foi-\niols, Faney Cheeks, Striped Homespuns, kc,\nA large stock of BUTTONS and TRIMMINGS to match all Dress Ooods.\nMantalasse, Soldi and Brocaded\nCLOAKINGS,\nA splendid stook.\nLadies' k .Gents' Gingham, Alpaca k Silk\nUMBRELLAS,\n;'. , .Jh all sizes,\nWhito, Scwlet, Ony, Navy, Fink, Ha.\nnion, Cardinal, Striped (t Chocked\nFLANNELS,\nIn all prices.\nLadles' Knitted\nSHAWLS,\nIn all shades.\nChildren's Knitted\nJackets, Hoods, &c,\nA fine assortment.\nLadies' and Children's\n, unuauiniuiuuiuiHuiii\nIn endless variety,\nA large stoek of Men's and Boys'\nCLOTHING\nA full line of\nGENTS' FURNISHINGS\nNECKTIES, COLLARS, BRACES,\nke., ko,, in all the latest stylos,\nJAMES ELLARD & GO.\nLONDON HOUSE,\n(oolite)\nTERMINUS\nLivery and Stage Stables I\nCOLUMBIA STREET,\nFootot Donglus, NEW WISTHINsTKK.\n. WM. B. TOWWEMDi' PROPRIETOR.\n1J KliM, % II Line omingcs lo Port Mono*).\nSpecial extra Ulgs when required.\nSaddle Horses and Buggies for hire.\nGeneral Teaming promptly attended to.\n600 CORDS OF FIRE WOOD FOR SALE.\nOrders loft at tlie London Market will\nbo promptly (Hied. oc8Io\nNext Eweii's Cannery,\nColumbia Street, New Westminster.\nSPEIRS & BEATON,\nMACHINISTS AND GENERAL BLACKSMITHS,\nThe latest appliances In machinery anil\ntools, and a good Job guaranteed.\nof every description. All orders promptly\nattended to, oolto\nSTATION RESTAURANT\nYALE, B.C.\nCLOSE AT HAND TO THE IIAILRUAD\nSTATION.'\nTIIE UNDERSIGNED having nttcd up\nthis newestulilisliniontasa flrst-class\nrestaurant, invite tlio ptiblicto givo him\na eall where Meals nre served on Ilie\nShortest Notice, Next door will he found\nA Well-Selected Slock of\nGROCERIES, GAME AND FRUIT\nAlso, a First-Class Bakery.\nP. CLAIR,\n.cum Proprietor.\nIMPORTANT\nHousehold Furniture\nAnd EFFECTS.\nJAM INSTRUCTED BY Mil. RANKIN\n; to sell by Publio Auction nl liisrcsl-\nonce, Ferris streot, on '\nTlmi-sdii*, October 2.1,1881,\nTho whole of Ills well kept Furniture, con-\nslating In part ns follows:\nPARLOR\nCarpet, Centre Table, Softt, Chairs and\nltoekers, Ornaments, Pictures, L'hnmlc*\nller.I-'Iro Irons, Window Illlnds, Lace Curtains, &e.\nDINING ROOM.\nOU Cloth, Extension Table, Stove,\nChairs, Lounges, iio<-kers, Brackets. Lace\nCurtains, Crockery, Glassware, Clock, &e\nBED ROOMS.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A22 Walnut Bedroom Suites Complete,\nCarpets, spring Mattresses, Lace Cur*\nInlns. lHnnkots, Comforters und other\nRedding, Stove, Au,\nPANTRY.\nA-complete outfit,\nKITCHEN.\nNo. 0 Range, nnd very complete outfit.\nPersons wishing to Inspect the furniture\nnuiv do so any lime before llie snle by\ncalling attlic residence,\nTERMS CASH,\n.IO!*! I'll <.OI 1>-*T0\K.\nocl Ltd Auctioneer,\nHard Times\nTHE PEOPLE (IV NKW tt'EKTMIN-\nsfcrand surrounding, country are Invited to soe llio\n-S-Sr-GREAT REDUCTION\nIn the prloes of Goods at\nThe ROYAL CITY\nBoot & Shoe Store\nThe people nro no doubt aware of the Superior quality of Boots and Shoes\nand other Ooods kept by\nMRS. E. GOLD,\nWhich ai'ounqucHtlouublythebestln this\nCity, mid cannot bo surpassed anywhere In tho Province;\nnow is'the time\nTo make purchases, when Goods ure sold\nto suit the times, bocanso\nMoney saved Is Money Earned.\nTho following goods, imported fiom the\nmimnfactories, aro ottered at n grout reduction, as tho stock, is larger thnn tlio\nstate of the market Justifies:\n41) pieces Canadian Tweeds.\n275 suits of Men's, Boys' and Youths\nClothes.\nlHOdozvn White Hhlrls, .\nGO dozen assorted Shirts.\nSI)dozen lino American Hats of the latest stylos and finest quulity.\n10 oases of New Goods just received by\nsteamer Idaho,\nTlio following Is the reduction of prices:\n30 per cent, oir Boots and Shoes,\n25 ti it Tweeds.\nai \" \" Clothing and Hats.\nit'i \" '! Dry Goods,\n40 \" !' Fancy Goods,\nNot for 20 days,\nNot for 40 days,\nNot to get rid of Old\nstock,\nI Have None\nNot to make room for\nmy new importations\nof fall Goods, they too\nare to go, and of which\n71 cases have arrived.\nThis Ureal Itcilurllon begin* nn\nTuesday, October 14th\nAND WILL CONTINUE UNTIL\nFMITIIEII NOTICE.\nMj.Country orilors will bo imiielnnlly\nattended In,\nNOTE THE ADDRESS:\nMRS. E. GOLD,\nROYAL CITY\nBoot and Shoe Store\nCOLUMBIA STREET,\n0|i|i. Kwi'n's l.'nnllory, New WeSTMINBUs.\n- uclltc.\nNot forced by circumstances to close out\nbusiness, but it will be\ndone all the same.\nDON'T\nFORGET IT\nOn and after the 15th\ninst, my entire stock\nof DBYGOODS,\nCLOTHING,\nCROCKERY,\nGLASS WARE,\nSILVER and\nPLATED WARE,\nGOLD WATCHES,\nCHAINS, Etc.,\nwill be sold at oost for\ncash OF COURSE.\nBefore the 15th I will\npublish a list of the\nprincipal LINES of\nGOODS, Etc., and prices which will astonish somebody.\nC.G. MAJOR\nAMI BUSS,\n-DEALER IN-\nFir Cordwood,\nAlder Cordwood,\nand Coal,\nWhich will be dollverod anywhere In the\nCity at the lowest possible rates, and In\nquantities to suit customers,\nATTENDED TO PIWMPTLY.\nB\" Orders may bo sent hy Telephone,\nor left nt the\nGROCERY\nCORNER OF COLUMBIA ft BUCKIE STS.,\nWhere will be found a complote Stook of\nDry Goods, Groceries\nand Provisions, Ae.,\nWhich nro oflhrod nt LOWEST BATES.\nARCHIE BURNS.\n(oclltc)\nWE HAVE JUST OPENED AT\niUU'slM\nCOLUMBIA SHEET\n(Centrally located for convenience of\nLadies ordering), a Market to supply the\nPublic with all kinds of Fresh, Salt and\nSmoked\nFish, Game,\nVegetables, Fruit,\n AND\t\nGeneral Farm Produce, &o\u00E2\u0080\u009E\nWhere there will always be found a good\nsupply oa hand,\nGOODS DELIVERED FREE OF\nCHARGE to private houses and hotels,\nupon orders being left at the oilice.\nWe respectfully solicit tlie patronage\nof the Publio.\ntT Remember tlio stand\u00E2\u0080\u0094TWO DOOM\nbelow Trapp Bros.\nWINDSOR 4 NELSON,\nManagers at Market,\nJAMES TAFFANDOLE,\njlyfitc Manager Fishing.\nEXPRESS RATES.\nUNTIL FURTHER NOTICE the rates\nof express freight ou tmckagOK and\nparcols, safely and properly put up and\nnot containing any extra valuable or\ndangerous compounds will be:\nBetween Victorin ana New West-\nminster.\nPackages under 10 lbs.... 26 ots, each\nPackages over ll and under 25...50 ots. each\nPaokagos over 31 ond under 60..76 cts, each\nPackages over 60 at 1 cent per lb\nFrom New Westminster to Yale-\nLess than S lbs.... 25ots. ench\nFrom a lbs. to 10 lbs 60ots. eaoh\nFrom 10 lbs. to 251bs 76cts. each\nFrom 26lbs. to 60 lbs,. ......$1 00 each\nFrom 60 lbs. to76 lbs. (fl 60 each\nFrom 76 lbs. to 100 lbs. or ovcr..2cts. per lb\nTO LYTTON AND POINTS BETWEEN\nYALE AND LYTTON.\nLess than 2 lbs 26 ots. each'\nFrom 2 lbs, to 5 lbs 60 eta. eaoh\nFrom 5 lbs, to 10 lbs..,,. 11 oo each\nFrom 10 lbs. to25 lbs \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 m cts. per lb\nFrom 25 lbs. to 75 lbs 8 eta. per lb\nOvor76 lbs (jots.perlb\nTo Sponco'B Bridge, Nicola*.Savons, Kamloops. Cooho Creek and Clinton, 20 ota.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0per lb.\nTo Barkorville and all points between\nBarkerville and Clinton ..25 ots. per lb\nOn C. O. D. nnd valuable packages one\npor cont. on value In addition to ordinary\nrates. *\n.MONEY RATES\nBetween Vletorla and New Wesl minuter,\n08 CTH. PER \u00C2\u00AB100.\nSHeinlttiiiii-es;iiisurod against nil risk at\n\"Lloyd's,-*\nFRANK 8. BARNARD,\nManager B, C, Express Co,\nFUED. HOMER, Fimjnt St.,\nau2to Agont Now Westminster.\nCIMAOGHTI\nWATCHMAKER\n-AND-\nte*w-el:l-e:e3\nWould call the attention of tho publio\nto this eolobrated make of\nAMERICAN WATCHES\nPrice, from SI4 Up.\nFor durability and timekeeping uno*\nquailed. Every watch guaranteed for five yoars.\nI HAVE ALSO ON HAND,\nW&lUwB. Eolith ui Sww Watohei\nIN OOI.l) AND 8ILVK1I..\nCLOCKS, FROM $1.60 TO $20\nI Qold.Sllvorniul Rolled Pinto\nJEWELRY\nA large assortment of\nGOLD RINGS,\nNECK CHAINS,\nSNAKE BRACELETS,\nLADIES' GOLD WATCHES, Stem\nand Key Winders.\n_#\t\nA nno soleotlon ot tlio latest stylos In\nElectro - Plated Ware!\nHalve*, r\u00C2\u00ABriU| ipaous, Ete.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2HPNONE BUT THE BEST QUALITY.\nPrices ns low as any house In my|llno\nand about 26 percent, loworthan thesame\ngoods can be bought for lu nny grocery or\nhardware store In the Province.\nWalekes, Clacks and Jewelry repaired\naad Mllsfliellon guaranteed.\nOld gold bought,\nRemember the Miami In Ihe\nNew Colonial Hotel Block\nOOMhlBIA STIU3ET,\nNew Weitminiter, British Columbia.\nMAINLAND\nCIGAR\nFACTORY\nWHITE LABOR ONLY.\nWM. TIETJEN\nH\nAS OPENED A CIGAIl FACTOHY\nIn tho\nHolbrook Stone Building,\nNEW WKSTMINBTEB,\nAnd having had many years experience,\nIs uow prepared to supply the trade with\na superior articlo at prices as low as can\nbe obtained elsewhere. Look out for Ihe\n\"MAINLAND\"\nniUND OP OK1AH&\nwrit beats them all. so21te\nCity of New Westminster,\nIMPORTANT\nAUCTION SALE!\nCITV RESERVES AND GARDENS\nA PUBLIC AUCTION will take placo\nJ\ uttlieCouiu-il Chambers, City of Now\nWestminster, on\nMonday, the 27th day ofOctobcr\nAT Kl.KVKN O'CLOCK IN TUB\nFOKKKQON,\nWlimi thp following Lots will 1)6 submit*\ntoil tojinbllo competition In nceonliinw\nWilli tlio Uml snlo IlyMiw, 1884, vlsi\nGovernment Oflce fiirtlena, Block k\nLot* 1,2,1,0,8,10,13, IS, 17, IB.\nVictoria flardena, Block B.\nLols 1,2,3,11X13,1:1,15, 18, 2D, 22, 21, 25\n20,21,28,20,31,83,ari,stl,3a\nAlice Gardens, Block K,\nl.ol\u00C2\u00AB 1,1,5,7,9.\nlouiso Gardens, Block 0.\nLots 1,2,4,0,7,8.\nClinton Place Reserve, Block f.\nLols I, 3, 5, 7,0,11,13, It, 18,20,22,23,21,\n27,28,30,82,33,3*.\nMerchant Square, Block 0,\nLols 1,2, J, 0,7,0.\nSailors' Hume, Block I.\nLots 1,2.\nTEltlfS-anU twroont. mi tlm (oil of tin\nliummer, :w!ii|)er\u00C2\u00ABioil. In threo months,\natltl llio Imhtlloo or tho mirclinso money In\nsix months train (Into of Hii lo.\nIly Onlor,\nA. J. ALI*OIlT, C. M. C.\nHoled nt New Westminster Iho 2ml ilny\nofHo|>toiubur,18fti, Dsotd\n-THE-\nWest Shore!\nSEPTEMBER, 1884.\nTHB OKEAT\nILLUSTRATED\n\u00C2\u00ABrDOUBLK NUMBER, \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00BB\nDKVOTKl) TO\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nA MAHNlriCENT NUMBER TO HUNIl\nTO YOUn KniENDf*.\nONLY 25 0ENT8 PER OOPY.\nTiPMM\nBole Agents for the Mainland.\nael7le IK* f ritiisk Columbian.\nSatnrtlay Morning, Oct. 18. MM.\nBev. ThoB. Croaby, of Port Simpson, arrived yesterday afternoon.\nThe Princess Louise arrired from\nVictoria at 3:20 yeaterday afternoon.\nUse only the celebrated \" Louis \" Velveteen. For sale by James Ellahd k\nCo. *\nTho weather continues most charming, and we may yet have a very fine\nfall.\nRemember that D. S. Curtis & Co.'s\nDrug Store is next door to the Colonial\nHotel se27to\nIt takes 9750,000 per week to pay\nthe expenses of the Gordon relief expedition.\nYesterday several acres of Coal\nHarbor property changed hands at\n^700 per acre,\u00E2\u0080\u0094-Colonist.\nThere is to be a sham fight near\nBeacon Hill next Tuesday, in which\nthe naval and land forces will take\npart.\nThe str. Teaser arrived from Chilliwhack yesterday afternoon with about\n30 passengers and proceeded to Victoria.\nMr, Gntmann has taken tho shop\nnext Mr. Letter's and has added guns\nand ammunition to the other lines.\nSee advertisement.\nWe understand that Mr. Ewen has\ncommenced proceedings to prevent the\nproposed sale of Merchants' Square.\nHe claims $2,500 damages, This is\nunfortunate.\nThe appointment of a general thanksgiving this year has been properly\nannounced, and we hope the day will\nbe generally observed. It is the Oth\nof November.\nFrom the Surrey counoil proceedings\nit would seem that the steam ferry bylaw will probably be made to suit the\ncontractor, and the Blip on the other\naide will be built.\nOn Wednesday another lot of 800,\n000 salmon eggs were mtfoly laid down\nat the hatchery. We are sorry to\nlearn that Mr. Mowat, superintendent\nof the hatchery, is laid up. \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 t\nAt the Kamloops assize court, on the\n8th inst., Judge Walkom presided,Mr.\nEberts acted as crown prosecutor and\nMr. McColl appeared on circuit. There\nwere no cases of special importance.\nWe learn that a hotel keeper at Chilliwhack was fined 9110 the other day\nfor selling liquor without a license.\nThe people of Chilliwhack have wisely\ndetermined that no liquor will be sold\nwithin that settlement.\nThe Kamloops AntineMndignantly\nrepudiates the insinuation of the Na*\nnaimo Free Press that newspapers receiving govornment advertisements are\nnecessarily supporters of the government. The Sentinel need hardly have\nbeon at the trouble to answer such an\ninsinuation. '\nLast Wednesday Mr. Watkis died\nin this city, and was buried in the\nChurch of England cemetery. Mr.\nWatkis has been mentally deranged\nfor some time, and had to ho kept in\nconfinement. We believe at ouo time\nho carried on a very oxtensive business\nin eastern OntarioA'\nWe are authorized to contradict the\nstatements made by a correspondent\nwho signed himself \"Surreyite\" respecting day's work on Johnston settlement roads. Instead of 92.50 and\nboard, the men get from 92 to $2.50,\nand invariably hoard themselves.\n\"Snrreyito\" must havo been drawing\nupon his imagination.\n. A Tacoma paper Bays: \"A capitalist\nof London, England, paid this city a\nvisit the fore part of this week, his\nbusiness being in connection with a\nproposed line of steamers between\nChina and Japan and the Sound,\ntouching at the terminus of the Canadian Pacitio and at Tacoma, the terminus of the Northern Paoifio,\nWe are informed that ttfo mail servico between this city and Langley\nPrairie has boen changed from Wednesday to Thursday. This will enable\ntht foreign mail arriving here on\nWednesday afternoon to roach Lang-\nleyv Prairie the next day, but mails\nfrom the prairie will have to lie here\ntwo days! The change is not any advantage.\nOn Sunday afternoon a pack train\nof about fifty animals arrived hero\nwith some goods for Mr. It. W. Me-\ngaw's store, having come from Hope\nby way of Nicola, Mr, Megaw haa had\npart of his stock come by railway, aud\nfinds the Hope trail the cheapest and\nbest. Parties here complain that goods\nforwarded from Victoria to come part\nof the way by railroad have not arrived\nyet.\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Kamloops Sentinel.\nSir John A. Macdonald explained\nto a reporter at Montreal recently that\nhe is quite accidentally accompanied to\nEngland by Mr. George Stephen, that\nhis triji hu not tho remotest connection with Canadian Paoifio railway\nbusiness, hut that he suffers from gas*\ntrio catarrh and goes straight to Sir\nAndrew Clark, who treated him for\nthe disease in 1681. He expects to be\nback in Ottawa by the 5th December.\nLast Sunday evening a peculiar\nsceno was witnessed : An Indian having turned up at a Chinese grocery,\nnear tho mill, under the influence of\nliquor, and, becoming demonstrative,\nha had to bo tied hands and feet.\nSome Chinamen ran a pole across h \u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nMr. ft. A. Harrison, Chemist and\nDruggist, Dunnville, Ont., writes: \"I\ncan with confidence recommend Northrop k Lyman's Vegetable Discovery and\nDyspeptic Cure for Dyspepsia, Impure\nBlood, Pimples on the Face, Biliousness\nand Constipation \u00E2\u0080\u0094 such cases having\ncome under my personal observation.\"\nCommunication*.\nCard of Thanks.\nEditor Columbian.\u00E2\u0080\u0094-We take this\nmethod of expressing our deep sense ol\nobligation to the many friends whose\nself-Micrificrriihelirandtiho^iytitfathy\nwere contributed during tho last hours\nof the late Dr. McLeod.\nJohn O. McLsod,\nA. McSwain.\nNew West, Oct. 17, 1884.\nFurred Tongub and Impure Bbiath\naro two concomitants of biliousness rem'\nedied by Northrop ft Lyman's Vegetable\nDiscovery and Dyepeptlo Cure. Heartburn, which harasses the dyspeptic after\nmeals, and all the perplexing and changeful symptoms of established indigestion,\nare dispersed by this salutary corrective\ntonic and celebrated blood purifier.\nBnrdette's Little Wire.\nRobert Burdette, the well-known\nhumorist who has immortalised the\nBurlington Hawheye, is one of the\nmost pathetic of writers. It is well\nknown that his wife, of whom he wu\npassionately fond, wss a confirmed invalid, and a woman of most amiable\ncharacter. Burdette nursed her and\nministered to her with untiring devotion to the last. The following letter,\ndescribing the closing scene of a singular life wss written by bim to an intimate friend:\nDear Mrs. Pilling; So many times\nI have tried to write to you since Carrie fell asleep, and so many times I do\nnot write because 1 have so much time.\nIt is not easy to do anything when one\nhas too much time. 1 wrote mure and\nwrote more cosily \u00E2\u0080\u0094 I accomplished\nmore when there was a restless little\nhead to be soothed and petted; when\nthere waa a hot, tumbled pillow to adjust; when there was a helpless little\nhead tu hold until the ache wont away.\nNow I havo nothing to do, and so do\nnothing.\nShe did uot puss away in forgetful*\nness of y >u. Too many times your\ncomiug hnd brought comfort to our\nIn une; too many times you had como\nwith hope nnd courage and strength in\nyour hands. She thought of you in\nthe closing days, and often spoke of\nyou.\nI wish you might have seen her\nwhen she lay at rest. I would like\nyou to have that picture of perfect\nrest, of eternal peaco, of quiet, untroubled sleep\u00E2\u0080\u0094the dear little face not\nmarked by une line or mark of pain\nand sickness; I would like you to have\nthat picture of her to curry in your\nheart-, because I know how dearly yon\nloved her.\nIfurliiat Sunday on the earth was without acute pain, but she was very restless, her breathing was distressed, she\nHto nothing. She wanted us, Dora\nand Kobbie and myself, to be nenr her'\nall the lime, as for months past she\nhad constantly expressed the sums de*\nsire. Many times she hoped we could\nbu alone, just onr own little family,\nwhen sho passed awny.\nSeveral times this afternoon sho\naakotl, \"How does the day wear on 1\"\nDuring the closing weeks of ..her earth*\nly life she had always used that ex\nprcuion in asking the hour. Dear.\njiatient, little sufferer. The day did\nindeed \"wear ou\" with her,\nSuddenly night camo on; she was\nweitry, but complained uf no acute\npain and seemed glsd. When the\ndarkness came on Dora took my plsce\nat her side; nt sunset and until 0\no'clock I walked on the lawn; -for\nweeks past Dora and I divided the\nwatching botween us, Carrie seemed\nso content and happy to have one of\nus near her nil the time.\nWhen I came in at nine o'clock there\nwas no. change to make us apprehensive. A Bcore of times within the\nyear we hod felt more fearful that the\nend was near. It made Carrie rest-\nless \"and distressed her to have us sit\nup, so I partially undressed and lay\ndown -by her Bide. The night grew\ncold, but she did not appear to notice\nit. The windows wero wide open for\nair, but her breathing was no easier.\nShe did not sleep. Part of the time\nshe closed her eyes, but for the greater\npart of the nigh the soft brown eyes\nwere open, the patient light that blessed onr home shining in them.\nAt times her mind was busy with\npersons and places and Bcenes remote\nin time and distance. All the night\nlong I heard her whispering softly, as\nthough she talked with the angels who\nwere ministering unto her. When I\nleaned closer to listen she would turn\nher face toward me, smile, and bid me\nneVermind; Bhe was only dreaming.\nConstantly the position of her head\nliad to be changed; her pillows grew\nhot, she said. Four pr five of them\nwere kept in almost continuous rotation, changing every two or throe\nminutes. She did not complain; she\ndid not appear to notice that she was\nso restless. About 2 o'clook in the\nmorning she asked again, \"How does\nthe night wear on ?\" and then I wanted\nto call the family, but she said, \"No,\nit was not necessary.\" \"1 do not\nthink,\" she said, \"the end is very\nnear.'\nTho morning air was blowing chill\nand.strong through the room, but she\ndid not appear to feel the cold very\nmifth, ana only had one light extra\nblanket thrown over her. About 4\no'clock I heard her say softly and lovingly: \"\n\"Sit closer to me, Dora.\"\nAnd then she added:\n\"How quiet and beautiful the take\nis to-night,\"\nThen I knew she was back in her\nold home on the bluff in Peoria, the\nbeautiful home of her girlhood; once\nmore she was sitting on the white-\ncolumed porch with Dora, her darling\nsister, always dear to her, and always\nhy her side, and they were looking at\nthe sleeping waters of the starlit lake.\nSho was sitting alone with Dora. Just\npluming its snowy wings for flight, the\nsoul turned back one moment to the\nmorning of life, and my darling nestled\nclose to the side of the loving and beloved sister.\nThe grey light of the early morning\nwas creeping in through the open windows, and on her patient face, glorified by suffering, was shining another,\nfairer light, that I know was streaming\nfrom celestial portals opening for her.\nShe smiled sweetly as I crossed the\nroom and stooped to kiss her, and\nsaid:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n\"Bob, dear, it is\n' Tbe chill before the dawning\nBetween night and morning.\"\nIt wu the hour at which she had\nexpressed the wish that she might pass\naway, and I knew that she referred to\na favorite verse of a poem that Bhe\nloved. I snid:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n\"Yes, dear, I think the sun will\ncome very soon now.\"\nHer face grow radiant as she smiled\nagain, and said:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n\"Yes, he will come for me this\nmorning.\"\nDora was quickly at her side, and\nwe knew there were watchers whom\nwe could not see standing in tho room,\nShe who wu so nearly put all suffering was solicitous only for our comfort,\nand in quiet, loving tones gave some\nlittle instructions: \"You must keep\nwell aud strong.\" *\nTbe nurse entered the room, but\nCarrie could take neither nourishment\nnor medicine. \"I wnnt nothing,\" she\nsaid. Her breathing became moro laborious. The doctor arrived, but she\ncould not swallow the medicine, and\nhe held her hand, bade her good-by,\nand went away, promising to come iu\nagain during the morning. About six\no'clock Bobbie came into the room,\nkissed his \"little mamma,\" and stood\nclose by her side,\nThere was no fear, no dread in all\nthe scene. She could speak only in-\nshort, broken sentences. As I repeated the beautiful promises to her, how\nher face kindled, u she smiled upon\nus, turning her dear face from one to\nthe other. Even u she entered the\nriver she uid, \"the sun wu shining\ntin it.\" She did not shrink. The\nwaters were not so oold nor so bitter.\nShe had no fear, for she relied on the\nstrong, right arm of the righteousness.\nMoved by a sudden impulse, about\nhalf au hour before she passed away,\nRobbie rushed to her side, threw his\narms about her, and holding her close\nkissed her. She kissed her boy, and\n-tenderly uid:\n\"God bless my baby.\"\nIt was her lut blessing on earth.\n\" Lord Almighty.\" she uid, in low,\nbroken accents, checked by her troubled breathing, \"into thy hands I\ncommend my spirit.\" Still she looked\nat us, smiling, until a few minutes be*\nfore the end. She uked for a drink\nof orangeade, but could not swallew.\n\"Evenso,\" she whispered, \"come quickly, Loid Jesus.\" Her head fell back\nin my arms. Lino a flash of sunlight\nthe \"bright white light\" swept across\nher face, carrying away the stain and\ncloud of disease, her face turned upward, and her oyes grew strangely radiant. \"Mother!\" the culled, joyously, ns a child would springing into a\nmother's arms, \"mother!\" \"iimther!\"\nand she wu folded in the arms of the\nangel mother, who had passed away\nwhen she was a child. Her face was\nwhite as the starlight, her radient eyes\nwere nut dimmed when she closed\nthem, and, for the first time in ninny\nyurt, she slept without a rain.\nVelvet mosses cover the little mound\nwhere she sleeps, and graceful ferns\nfringe it around. She rests in tho\nchurchyard of quaint, old-fashioned,\nLord Marion Church. It wus her own\nwish, made nearly or quite a yesr ago,\nI think the angels must have been\nvery glsd to see ner come. So many\nof thom had ministered unto her, aud\nstrengthened her in her pilgrimage of\nsuffering, and I know that they rejoiced when she came to be with them.\nThere never wu so brave, so patient a\nlife among men. There could be no\nlife braver, even among women.\nWe will always be glad to hear from\nyou, Mrs. Pilling. Wt will remain\nin Ardmero, in the house sanctified by\nher life and death, until next April,\nanyhow.\nRobbie and Dora unite' in sending\nlove to yoo. You'd hardly know your\nlittle white-faced bny, he's so ruddy.\nGood bye, Sincerely your friend,\nRobert J. Burdkttr.\nSurrey Council.\nCounoil met on the 7th inst.; present,\nreeve, and councillors Morton, Johnston,\nShannon and Brown. A number of communications were received and filed/\nCoun, Morton wsb instructed to find and\nstake out the section line between sections 5 and 6 and sections 7 and 8, township 8, so that the work on Milton road\nmay be put in proper place. The reeve\nwai instructed to see whether or not the\ncouncil could lawfully build the steam\nferry Blip according to specifications; and\nlie was also instructed to hire somebody\nto see tliat the pilos for the same are\nproperly driven, Mr. Boothroyd was\nallowed until April lst to complete his\ncontract on coast meridian road, and Mr.\nHart was allowed an extension of time\non his Hall's prairie road contract. Mr.\nWm. Shannon reporting tbe ditch on\ncoast meridian rood, Nicomekl flats, to\nbe caving in, Couu. Shannon was instructed to confer with Mr, Robs ami make\nsuch changes in the specifications as they\ndeem fit in order to prevent further caving in. The job on Cann's road wu\nawarded to Mr. Win. A. McCalluin,\nwho agreed to make 65 rods of road for\n$37. The amendment to the steam ferry\nbylaw passed through its three readings\nsuccessfully and willb-s reconsidered and\nfinally passed at tho n -xt meeting. The\nbill of Mr. A. L. Hdok for cleaning ont\ntimber on McLellan road was ordered\npaid. Counoil adjourned till Saturday,\nNovember 16, at I p. m.\n \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00BB \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nA letter from P. O. Shoreless, Druggist, Marion, Ohio, in writing of Dr.\nThomas' Eclectrie Oil, says: One man\nwas cured of sore throat of 8 years'\nstanding with one bottle. We have a\nnumber of cues of rheumatism, that\nhave been cured when other remedies\nhave failed. We consider it the best\nmedicine sold.\nstylo, Tlie Chinese losses arc throe\nthousand killed, including their chief\ncommander. The Chinese invasion of\nTonquin has been arrested in the direction of Lang Soon.\nParis, Oct. 16.\u00E2\u0080\u0094A Temps despatch\nfrom Hanoi, Tonquin, atntea that the\nChineso army wu completely dispersed\nafter its recent defeat, leaving killed and\nwounded on the field and abandoning an\nimmense quantity of provisions. Many\nmandarine killed. Weather in Tonquin\nia cooler and more favorable for military\noperations. The press continue to urge\non the government the reinforcement of\nthe army in Tonquin as the only means\nof bringing China to terms.\nParis, Oct. 16.\u00E2\u0080\u0094In the chamber of\ndeputies to-day notices were given of interpellation of government, especially in\nregard to the course pursued in China.\nThe senate unanimously voted the gratitude of the country for services rendered\nFranco by troops in China.\nIt Is reassuring to learn on what is\nsaid to bo good authority that the\namount of counterfeit paper money\nnow in circulation is leu than it has\nbeen for twenty years put. The most\nskillful counterfeiters have beon placed\nwhero they ean do no harm.\nDo not delay in getting relief for the\nlittle folks. Mother Graves' Worm Exterminator is a pleasant and suro cure.\n...... m\ntTJtjveral houses for sale hyC. D. RAND,\nHEWS FROM ALL PARTS flF THE WORD.\nLondon, Oct. 14.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The marriage of\nIda Therese Foote, daughter of Capt.\nFoote, of the U. S. Navy, and Lord\nMontague Paulet, sou of the Marquis of\nWinchester, took place at St. George's\nChurch. U. S. Minister Lowell and a\nlarge and fashionable company were present. After tho wedding they break-\nfasted at Kensington Palace, The newly\nmarried couple started for Nice. The\nwedding presents were many and coatly.\nQueen victoria sent an antique diamond\nbracelet and gold breakfast server. The\nPrince and Princess of Wales sent a diamond necklace and Indian shawl. The\nbeauty of the American bride was much\nremarked, Hor entire trousean, which\nis of American manufacture, commanded\nadmiration.\nQuebec, Oct. 14. -Four men are suspected of causing, the explosion at the\nparliament buildings Saturday. They\nranged in age irom forty to twenty-one.\nThey all occupied the same room, in\nwhich were two double beda, Madame\nMolan, the landlady, not understanding\nEnglish, could not make anything ont of\nthoir conversation. These men seemed\nto have all the money they had with\nthem ou their persons. They were in\nthe habit of paying for each meal as they\npartook of it, and also of paying for their\nbeds each morning. On Thursday lut\nthe youngest left, taking with him a\nheavy valise, and did not afterwards return. All seemed to be well supplied\nwith American money, which it seems\nthey had some difficulty in getting exchanged for Canadian money to pay their\nbills with. Saturday morning one of the\nguardians of ths Central Quebec railway,\nat Levis, stated that on Friday he had\nheard the men sneaking in reference to\nan Intended explosion in front of the station, and he at once communicated what\nhe had heard to the police of Quebec\nand Levis. \t\nDublin, Oct. 14.\u00E2\u0080\u0094If the Parnellites\nfail to obtain a pledge from Gladstone\nthat the government will recall Earl\nSpencer from tho lord-lieutenancy of Ireland, and allow the crimes act to lapse,\nu proposed by Captain O'Shea, M. P.\nfor Clara, tboy will not vote with the\nTories, but will withdraw thoir votes\nfrom the Govemment.\nPaws, Oct. 14.-VTho Congo yellow\nbook confirms the reports in relation to\ntho Congo country, already published.\nBismarck writing to the French ambassador at Berlin, Sept. SOth, considers it\nexpedient to issue invitations forthwith\nto six nations interested in the Congo\ncountry, Including the United States,\nand that other powers, Including Scandinavian states be invited, the latter to\nshare In the deliberations to secure general assent. In Paris bad impressions and\nfurs are expressed that Germany is duping France. Ilie Nationak of Paris\nfears the tone of the yellow book will\naccentuate the antagonism of France and\nEngland.\nMontreal, Oct. 14.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Special precautions are taken to guard the publio\nbuildings aiuco the explosion at Quebec\non Saturday. Trains and steamers from\nQuebec are carefully watched by detectives in hope that the dynamiters may\nbo apprehended.\nHong Kong, Oct. 14.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Admiral Courbet is reinforcing tbe French squadron\nbefore Tarn Sui, Formosa, aud preparing\nfor a new attack upon that town. He\nhu sent Admiral Lespes bock to Kelung.\nParis, Oct. 14,\u00E2\u0080\u0094A memorial diplomatique states that Queen Vi. toria requested Gladstone to submit iu the cabinet\nfor their conaitleiutiou of the nucation\nwhether apodal powers cannot be conferred ou the Prince of Walea to enable\nbim to participate in the eonferciice of\nsovereigns of Europe.\nLoudon, Oct. Hr\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094The demand of\nGranville in a letter to Bismarck, qnali-\nfving acceptance of invitation to the\nCo go conference, limiting the programme of conference to regulation of\ncommerce in tbe Congo country, aiul not\nto trench upon disputes as to territory\nof tho West count of Africa, hu received\nadhesion holding Portugal and Italy.\nUntil this matter ia settled* the holding\nof the conference is doubtful.\nLondon, Oct. 15.\u00E2\u0080\u0094It ia announced\nthat Bismarck hu acceded to the demand of Granville that tlie business of\nthe Congo Conference be limited to tbe\ncommerce of nations with tho Congo\ncountry. The French government insists that the trade of the Nicer river\nand country be also considered by the\nconference.\nToronto, Oct. 15.\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Walts Bros., jewellers, hove assigned; liabilities, $90,000;\nassets, about 845,000. Jas. Campbell A\nSons, publishers, have assigned; liabilities, $250,000; assets unknown. The\nMerchants Bank Ib interested $100,000.\nBarber Bros., wholesale woolens, Streets-\nville, have assigned; liabilities, 8200,000;\nassets, 8100,000. The Bank of Commerce is n creditor for 800,000.\nParis, Oct. 15.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Gen. d'Lisle tele*\nstaphs from Cim, on the Upper Loo\nChan, the following: Col. Donniter, after\na brilliant engagement on Friday, carried\ntho heights commanding the fortress of\nChuu, forming a point of daphuy nf large\nentrenched Chinese camp, which v u defended by casemsted forts. Tho Chineso\nforces are very large, and their losses\nduring the engagement heavy. On Saturday they attempted to assume the\noffensive, but oar artillery strewed tho\nCnnd with Chinese bodies. After los-\nall thoir positions the Chinese fled\ntoward Lang Soon, halting near Phut-\nrupng and Khauk. The Frenoh low Is\ntwenty killed, one officer; ninety men\nnnd two officers wounded. Our troops\nwere animated with the greatest order.\nThe Chinese engacod wero part of the\nbest troops in the Empire, perfectly\nArmed, and manoeuvred in European\nYESTERDAV8JIESPATCHE8\n(Special io the CWumWon.)\nLondon, Oct. 17.\u00E2\u0080\u0094A Foo Chow dis-\npatch in the Times says another engagement was fought on shore at Tarn Sui.\nTwo hundred Chinese were killed. The\nFrench less is trifling.\nSuakim, Oct. 17\u00E2\u0080\u0094It ia believed that\nOsman Digma, the rebel leader, will succeed in massing hiB forces at Tamara.\nThe English have lost their chance of\ncrushing him for ths present. Both\nweather and cropB favor hint.\nParis, Oct. 17.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Fresh foroeB of Chinese are invading Tonquin, Gen. de\nLisle telegraphs tliat there are many\nEuropean officers iu the Chinese army.\nDonoola, October 47\u00E2\u0080\u0094A special messenger hu returned from Mody Garna.\nHe reports that the'inhabitants there declare the Bteamer which ran aground\na few days ago had some money on board\nwhich belonged to the Greek Consul.\nThere were 40 Europeans and natives on\nboard. The Bteamer was armed, and carried booty which it hal captured by the\nparty in a fight witli the rebels. It had\nalso on board the heads of rebels who.\nwere killed. When the steamer ran\naground at Salamat the inhabitants wen\nterrified. The messenger reports the\nstory of treachery and massacre, to which\nthe people on the steamer were subjected. He says there were no whites among\nthe prisoners.\nShanghai, Oct. 17\u00E2\u0080\u0094Five Frenoh men\nof war are stationed at Kelung and\nright before Tarn Sui. The Chiuese aro\nfortifying the heights and refuse to surrender their positions. The natives itt\nsouthern ' Formosa are harassing the\nsouthern Chinese troops who are asking\nfor re-enforcements.\nLondon, Oot. 17.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The Times says\nEngland hu signified to Gennany her\nacceptance of the principles On which\nthe African conference shall take place,\nbut haa not yet formally accepted an invitation to be present at the conference.*,\n i\u00E2\u0080\u0094 \u00C2\u00BB**- ......\nH. Gladden, West Shefford, P. Q.,\nwrites: For a number of years I have\nbeen afflicted with rheumatism. Two\nyears ago I was attacked very severely.\nI Buffered a great deal of pain, from\nwhich I was not free for a day, until last\napring, when I began to use Dr. Thomas'\nEclectrie Oil, and 1 rejoice to say it has\ncured me, for which I thankful,\nDog Intelligence and Heroism\nTbe large Newfoundland dog Heck,\nbelonging to tho St. Elmo Hotel in the\noil town of Eldred, Pa., wu known\nthroughout the northern oil field for its\ngreat strength and almost human intelligence, The porter of the hotel, a kind\nhearted bnt intemperate person, wu un\nespecial favorite witli the dog. The\nporter, a small man, slept in a little\nroom back of the office. The dog slept\nin the office. On the night of Sept. 18\nlut, tbe porter wu drunk when he went\nto bed, and soon fell into a heavy sleep.\nSome time in the night he wu awakened\nby the loud barking of Heck, who wu\njumping frantically on the porter's bed\nand seizing the pillow with hiB teeth.\nThe still drunken and drowsy porter\ntried to make the dog go away, but the\nanimal persisted In his efforts, and it\nfinally dawned on the befuddled mind of\nthe porter that tho house wu on fire.\nHis room was full of smoke, and ho\ncould hear the crackling of the flames.\nHe sprang trom the bed, bnt wu still so\ndrunk that he fell to the floor. Ths\nfaithful dog at once seized him by the\ncoat collar, the porter not having removed his clothing on going to bed, Aud\ndragged him out of the room and half\nway to the outer door of the office, when\nthe man succeeded in getting to his feet,\nand, unlocking the door, staggered into\ntiie street. The fire wu rapidly spreading over the building, aad the hotol was\nfilled with guests, not one of whom hod\nbeen aroused. The dog no sooner saw\nthat his helpless friejid wu safe than he\ndashed back into the house and ran barking loudly upstairs.\nHe first stopped at the door of b's\nmaster's room, where he howled and\nscratched at tlie door until the inmate\nwu made aware of the danger and hurried out of tho house, u there was no\ntime to lose. Tlie dog gave the alarm at\nevery door, snd in some instances con*\nducted guests down stairs to the onter\ndoor, eaoh one of these, however, being\na stranger iu the house, which fact the\ndog Becineil to understand iu looking out\nfor thoir safety. All nbout the house\naeemetl ta have lost tlieir bonds in the\nexcitement, nnd it is uid that the hotol\ndog alone preserved complete control of\nhimself, and alone took active tneuures\nto save the inmates of the house, In\nand out of the burning building he kept\ncontinually dashing, piloting aome half-\ndressed man oi- woman down stairs, only\nto at once rahtm in search of others.\nOnce n liuly with a child in her arms\ntrippi-il nu the -ttuiw while hurrying out,\nand fell to tho bottom. The child was\nthrown ou the floor of the hall some distance away, The woman regained her\nfoet, ami staggered in a dared May out\nof the door, leaving the child in the midst\nof the smoke that wu pouring from the\noffice door. The brave dog uw the mishap, sad jumping iu through the smoke\nwhich wm now becoming almost impassable, and seizing the chdd by its uiijht-\nclotbea, carried it safely out.\nNotwithstanding this rescue, th - mishap that mado it uecessary led to the\ndoath of the noble animal. The mother\nof the child on being restored bythe\nfresh air first became aware that tho\nchild wu not with her, and crying out\nwildly that \"Anna wu burning np in\nthe house!\" made a duh for the building, u If to rush through the flames to\nseek her child. Heck had already\nbrought the little one out, bnt it\nhad not yet been restored to ite mother.\nThe dog uw the frantic rush of the mother toward the burning building and\nheard hor exclamation that someone wm\nburning up In the house, and, although\ntho building wu now a mass of smoke\nand flames Tnaido and ont, tho deg sprang\nforward aud, u a dozen hands seized the\nwoman and held hor back from the insane attempt to enter the house, disappeared with a bound over tho burning\nthreshold, Tho faithful animal never\nappeared again. His remains wero found\nin the ruins. Thero is no doubt iu anyone's mind that but for the intelligence\nsnd activity of Heok the fire In the hotel\nwould not have been discovered iu time\nfor a single inmate to have escaped from\nthe building -vith his life; and that the\nnoble animal understood from the half-\ncrured movements of the child's mother\nthat there wu still another one in dan-\nf;er, and to rescue whom he gave his own\nIfc, is accepted U certain. The remains\nof Heck were given a fitting burial, and\nhis loss is regretted u that of n useful\ncitizen might m,\nThere are a number of varitlasof cons,\nHolloway's Corn* Cure will remove any\nof them.\nPer atr. PrlucesH Louise, (rom Victoria.\nOfil.15.-Mr and Mrs Haney, Hev Mr and\nMrs Dunn, Mrs Austin, Mrs Stewart *\nfamllo. Mr* Mra Reed Hteve.LeCharop,\nCylo, Nelson, Gordon, Murray, CaptlUM*\naay, McGee, Southerby, and o\n\u00C2\u00ABI!er.5trvPrinee\u00C2\u00BB.8.'' -^atUt from Vletorla,\nOct. 17.-Dr A Mrs Bently, Miu Waft*\nMl*\u00C2\u00BBr..j..-lHn-l,MrisRed|Hd,DChUbo|U,\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Mill-. Orani, Hand, Wontbre-p. Ut\nnoy, W N Role, Baldwin, Reynolds/\nothers.\nTHE WEST MUSH I \u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Mil !\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n-The (.real Illutrated Brill* CHUB*\nbia Edition. A fnll saypiy in -\u00E2\u0080\u00A2* bmmA\nal T. K.Praraoii *<*<>'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0., sale agsalsfcr\n(he MalaUad, at U c4*. each. le\nThe Langley Salk,\u00E2\u0080\u0094Bear in mbr4\nthat the dato of the Langley otitis sale\nhu been changed from the 19th Horem*\nber to tbe 22ND OCTOBER. ocltd\nLive Bear and Seal at the Fulton Uar\nket where you can order choice vegeta*\nbles from the celebrated farms of Kirk*\nland and Steves.- Adv.\nJob printing of all kinds neatly dew\nat the Columbian office. Pricw will be\nfound lower than at any other office hi\ntlio province.\u00E2\u0080\u0094-Adv.\nMortgages, Deeds, Leases, Agree\nments of Halo, and blank forms ei all\nkinds, at T. It. Pearson A Co's. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nBeautiful photographic jmnoroate\nviews in British Columbia, 75 ots. per\nset at T. R, Pearson A Co.*a. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 .\nI\nEPORMED KPISCOPAl* ClMUVh\nj Jtev.G. a Allen, Pastor. BortUom-l*\ne Court Hon ne eve-y Hunday ai 11 a. *,\nand 7 p. m. Sunday School at \u00C2\u00BBfc\u00C2\u00AB.\nAll are invited.- jtMe.\nMethodist church, Mary M,\nRev. C. Watson, Pastor. Services at\nII a. in. ami 7 p. m. .Sunday School sm\nBible Class 2:M)p. m. Prayer Meeting OS\nThursdays at dp, in. Beats tree; stranieti\ncordially Invited. Je7*u*.\nft UNION I.OIMJB Mo, t, A* *\u00C2\u00AB\n_#Vf * A. SI.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The regular Com*\nlL^ mimical Ions of this Lodge mtm\n/VV held ou the first Monday In eaelt\nmonth. Sojourning brethren are cordially invited to attend WM. HOWAY,\nfe23*te Secretary.\nTEMPBRMiCE. \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Thc W. O. T. V.\nineetn every Wednesday afternoon at.\n3.:\u00C2\u00AB In the bnscment of the Methodtrt\nChurch, Mary Ht. The Blue Ribbon Club\nmoelK evory Wednesday evening at tht\nskntlnj- Rink; musical and literary sn*\ntertahiment from 8 to 0. Every one Ir.\ncordially Invited. Bond of Hope meets In\nthe lecture room of the Methodist Church\nevery Saturday afternoon at half-paattwo\no'clock. auStc\nIf yon aro growing Ony tr BaM|\nIT your Hair to Thin, Bmhy, Dry,\nHarsh, or Weak;\n| If yon are trouble* with Daiinfi\nItch! ng, or any Honor or M*\nease ofthe Scrip,\nUSK\nAyer'sHairVigor.\nIt heals nelil, mrj Jllisss psMdMr tt\nthe snip, elude, ths till\u00E2\u0080\u0094, cut ol Uw Hs*\nand prerentl tt Irom tnrolnf gray, aad I, m\nunequalled dressln, and toilet article.\nDr.J.C.Ay\u00C2\u00ABr&Oo.,Lowtll,MMr.\nSoldbjallDrcfileel.\nORGANS\nMUSIC.\n-FOB SALE BY-\nT. R. PEARSON & CO.,\nCOLUMBIA STREET,\nNew Weitminiter, B. C.\n(nUto)\n-THE taBHIB-\nDoinii Organs!\nAcknowledged by all Musicians to have\nNO SUPERIOR\nIn Canada.\n.OF THESE.\n2\nFINE INSTRUMENTS\nJ unt Received from the Factory, and\nnow ou exhibition.\nWe oiler these first-class Organs at ft\ntreinely low prices for cash. Call mmi\nsee thom.\nT.R. Pearson St Co.,\nNow Westminster, Sole Agent, tor British Colombia.\nMONUMENTS\nD. J. ROBSON,\nNEW WESTMINSTBB,\nSole Agcit for Bruin rtliakli,\n_ liujl ft Out Storj).\n\u00E2\u0099\u00A6'Are you so suro that Hester will\nmarry him?\" was all that Edward anitl.\n\"Mary him! Why, how could ho\nhnvo so much as looked that way without oncouragoment? To be sure she\nwill marry him. Whero could she\nfind any one who imd so much to offer?\nThe girl is not a fool. Besides, her\nmother would not let her if ehe wished\nit; and of course she would not wish\nit\u00E2\u0080\u0094an ambitious girl, to whom her\npresent position is intolerable. Don't\nyou remember her look on the Thursdays, which we both remarked.\"\nEdward had romarked it, not exactly in ths aame wny ns Catherine\nhad done. Heater's laok had made\nhim ashamed of himsolf, but he had\nnot had the Btrength to go and display\nhimself at her side ns Harry had dono.\nIt made him furious to think of Harry\nntandiug there by her in the corner,\nnot caring what their patroness might\nthink. It was a courage of which ho\nwas not capable.\n\"Don't you think,\" ho said, softly,\n\"that we arc going too fast, Aunt\nCatherine, in every way? Harry's\nvisit may be a chanco one. There\nmay be no purpose nt all in it, or it\nmay have some other purposo.\"\n\"He was thore last night, and on\nlast Saturday and Wednesday, and I\ndon't know how many evenings bo-\nBides. Oh no, thore can be no doubt\non the subject. It will be a great\namusement for the Vernonry; the\ndear old ladies wnnt something to\namuse them.\"\nThis was aaid of the Ridgwaya and\nMr. Mildmay, who were all younger\nthan Catherino, aud one of them a\nman. But that fact increased thu\npleasantry all the more.\nThe curiouB thing waB, that through\nall this Catherine was aware that what\nshe wns saying was unworthy of her,\nand in reality was disgusted with herself, nnd kept a mental reckoning of\nall the meannesses of which sho had\nbeon guilty. There were first her remarks upon Mrs, John, which indeed\nmight bo true enough, but which she\nought not to have made; nnd hur certainty that scheming nud \"encouragement\" must have been used to entrap\nHarry, and that Hester wuuld marry\nhim for an equivalent. No moralist\nwould havo noted these faults more\nclearly than Bhe did horself, yet somehow sho went on with them nil tho\nsame. But it vexed nnd annoyed her\nto find Edward so constrained. He\nsaid, \"Will you come and have a turn\nin the garden?\" but not in his usual\ntone. That turn in tho pardon had\nbeen doubly pleasant to her, because\nhe had made it appear that it was\npleasant to him too.\n\"I think not to-night,\" she said.\n\"There is a new moon. It is a\nlovely evening,\" said he. \"I think\nymi ou\u00C2\u00ABht to go. The sunset mi one\nside, and that clear, pale, shining in\ntho east on the othor, make sueli a\nbeautiful contrast. Como, Aunt Catherine, it will do yuu good.\"\n\"You think it will blow tho ill\nnatured thoughts out of my head,\"\nshe said with a laugh.\n\"Hnve you ill-natured thoughts? I\nwas not aware of it,\" said Edward;\nand then ns she did not move he nd-\nded\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"If you will not oome I think I\nmust go and give a little attention to\nsome papers I brought home with me.\nI hod nut time to look at them duping\nthe day.\"\n\"What papers?\" she said quickly,\n\"Oh, only somo proBpectuaes nnd\ndetails about investments,\" he said\nwith a careless air, and left hor, to\nher t*rcitt surprise.\nHu had been in tho habit of telling\nher of any work ho had, all nbout it,\nand of sitting with ber for an hour or\ntwo at least. Catherine was surprlaed,\nbut as ia natural in a first shock of\nthis kind, having got ovor the momentary prick of it, assured horself it waa\naccidental nnd meant nothing, yot was\na little more vexed with that \u00C2\u00BBiv\ and\nwith Harry, because in the same way\ntheir concerns had brought about this\nlittle'break, this momentary lapse in\nthe continuance. She could uot any\nlonger amuse herself with tho prospect of tho Vernonry and the little excitement of this dawning story. There\nwere, a great many pricks about the\nstory altogether, sentiments and sensations of which, when left alone and\nwithout the support nf nny moral\nbacker up, of Meredith's stimulating\ndisclosures or Edward's assent, she\nfelt ashamed. It was wrong to speak\nas Bho had done about the astuteness\nof Mrs. John's simplicity. Why should\nnot the mother wish to place ber child\nin the position which she, nfter all by\nno fault of hur own, poor creature,\nhad lost? Catherine escaped from the\ntingling of shame at her own pettiness\nwhich had gone through her, by considering tho final arrangements which\nshe would have to make in view of\nHarry's marriage. Practically she\nwas always magnanimous; alio would\nhave scorned a petty cutting off, a restraint of liberality, a condition to\nher gifts. Her givings were always\nlarge, and if her mind was warped by\nthe sense of benefactions unappreciated or kindness unprized, of reaping\nenvy and resentment where she should\nhave got gratitude nnd love, wns it not\ntho fault of her pensioners more than\nher own, the fault of human nature,\nwhich she had boen forced to believe\nshe saw through, and wliich\u00E2\u0080\u0094-in order\nnot to break hor heart over it\u00E2\u0080\u0094she\nwas obliged to laugh at and despiso?\nIt would have given Catherino Vernon a sharper snook still if sho had\nseen into Edward's mind as he went\naway from her, bitterly feeling thnt\nwhile other mon could taste the sweet-\nneis of freedom and of lovo, he was\nattached to an old woman's apron-\nstrings, and had to keep her company\nand dc her pleasure, instead of taking\nthe good of youth liko the rest. It\nwas a sudden crisis of this bitterness\nwhich had mado it impossible for him\nto boar the yoke which he usually\noarried so patiently, and which ahe,\ndeceived in this instance, believed to\nbe pleasant to him, tho natural impulse of a tranquil and home-loving\ndisposition. Had Bho known how he\nregarded it, how violently he suppressed and subdued himself, the\nshook would hnvo been a terrible ono;\nfor she was slow to put faith m those\naround her, and she clung to the one\nwho had been able to impress her with\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 sense of trustworthiness, with a\ndouble tenacity. Edward breathed\nmore freely when he got out of that\ndrawing-room whero ho had always\nMimed so entirely at home. The library In which ho snt when he was\nalone was a little less oppressive in so\nfar that he was alono in it, but the\nrecollection of Harry going lightly\nalong in his freedom, going a-wxiing,\nhad raised suoh a ferment in the breiiat\nof the other whioh it was very difficult\nto quiet down.\nSince the morning when ho mndo\nher acquaintance first, Hester hm}\nbnn an interest to the self-sufficing\nyoung man. Perhaps it was only a littlo warmer than the interest lie felt\nin his botany, in a now specimen, but\nit liad continued through all those\nyears. Whon ho spoke that, little\naside to hor at tho party\u00E2\u0080\u0094with Iub\neyebrows and shoulders in a suppressed\nand confidential attitude which placed\nhimsolf and her in tbe samo category\nof compelled assistants at a lugubrious\nmerry-making where neithor of them\n\"got on\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094he felt her, in her poor little muslin frock and her high indignation, to be far the most interesting\nperson in tho room, and he resented\nthe necessity whioh made it impossible\nto him, as the official host, to separate\nhimself from the more important peoplo\nand show the opinion he had of her.\nHere, again, the disabilities of his\ngood fortuno woighod upon Edward.\nHe waB tho host; he was the first person thero next to'Catherine, her representative, tho master of all her wealth.\nHarry was not of any authority in the\nhouse, bo he could do as ho pleased\nand earn the gratitude of Hester; but\nEdward could neither go to her side in\nher corner unr set out of a lovely\nevening, in Iub pleastintoat clothes, to\nwoo her, us a free man might. He\nwas not sure that he wanted to woo\nher, any more than as a fine specimen;\nbut ho could not boar the impudence\nof the other follow who thought himself good enough to go after her, and\nwhom Catherino thought so sure to\nwin. It made him angry, it made\nhim furious; it made him for the moment tno much a natural man, too\nsincere and real, to be capable of Iub\nusual self-suppression. Barry would\nhave an equal share with himself of\nthe bank: they were equal there in\npower and authority, and in tho profits\nthey drew. Why, then, was it that\nHarry Bhould be Iub own master nnd\nEdward tho slave of an old woman?\nThis was the uttemnco of liis passion,\nof the sincerity which was forced upon\nhim by the enticements of the summer\nnight, the freedom of the air, and the\nsight of all tbo privileges which Harry\noxeroiBed so easily without knowing\nthey were privileges.\nNo doubt the fellow thought himself good enough for Hester\u00E2\u0080\u0094perhaps\nbelieved that sho would jump at him,\nand was encouraging lum, and ready\nto accept his proferrcd hand as soon as\nevor ho should hold it out. This\nthought made Edward's blood boil,\nand the confinement of the Grange became so oppressive to him that he did\nnot know how to bear it. Ho indemnified himself by plunging into the\nmidst uf the bundle of papers which\nhe had not chosen to describe to\nCathorine. In theso papers lay far\nmoro excitement than all Harry's j\nprivileges had supplied. A battery i\nof artillery planted in front of thia\npeaceful Grange, with all its matches\nalight, would scarcely havo been more\nfull of danger. Thoro was enough in\ntho packet to tear the house up by\nthe roots and send its walls (lying in\na whirlwind of ashes and ruin. Edward aat down to examine it as another man might have flown to brandy or\nlaudanum. Dreams were in it of sudden successes, of fortunes achieved in\na moment\u00E2\u0080\u0094cnstles in thn nir moro dazzling than ever rose in a fairy title.\nHu revenged himself ou his bonds, on\nthe superior happiness of his rival, on\nCatherine, above all, the unconscious\ncause of his imprisonment, by this.\nHero wob enough, all ready uud in Iub\nhands, to ruin them all.\nIMPORTERS AND WHOLESALE\n DEALERS IN\t\nProvisions,\nLiquors,\nFRONT STREET,\nNEW WESTMINSTER \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n(joKSto)\n&\nAJLr.ES!\nBIIOB * OO. AKE NOW PRE*\n pared to supply tlie vory best Ale\nfrom tho WoHtmlnstor Brewery. Orders\nloft with Mr. Clias. MoDonoitgu,* Front St.,\nsliiil I have prompt at ton tion. Judlc\nK\nt=tO;\n-f,\ni\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00C2\u00A3\u00C2\u00A3\n- d ti\n3\nH\n'...&'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 '-:'\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 n .\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 K \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\ng\na\na\nH\n\\u00C2\u00A3 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n':d :\n2\n0\nS\n&\nU\nB\nVI\nC\n'!\nto\n$\nis\nz\nLadner's Landing ...\nVictoria..^.\t\n<\nin\nO\no\n2\nCQ\nm\nO\nX\nH\n-IMPORTERS-\nSHIPPIN& & COMMISSION\nMERCHANTS,\nFRONTS!., \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 NKW WETTMINSTEK\nOFFER FOR SALE\nExtra, Supcrllnc and Gralmm\nFLOUE\nBARLEY,\nGROUND BARLEY,\n' WHEAT,\nMIDDLINGS\nMM.jm.SMkT9\nOf alt the peoplo who discussed Iub\naffairs and were intereatcd in hia\nprosperity, Harry Vernon hiimolf\nwould havo agreed most entirely with\nCatherine. Bo had no very elevated\nideal either of lifo in general or tavon\nof lovo, though that influenced him\nut the present moment very powerfully. He had got to bo ''very fond,\"\nas ho would himself have described\nit, of HeBtor. He thought hor vory\npretty, to begin with delightful, attractive, and amusing\u00E2\u0080\u0094-the sort of girl\nwith whom life never would bo dull.\nHe thought her clever\u00E2\u0080\u0094ono who would\nbo able to manage his now somewhat too largo and unwieldy house\nand take the trouble ofl' his hands; he\nthought that, handsomely dressed, as\nuf courBO she would bo, ahe would\nlook very nice at tbo head of his\ntable and make it popular \u00E2\u0080\u0094 hotter\neveu than Ellon had done: for iu\nEllon's time it had been somewhat\nfast and noisy, more than Harry, with\nthe instincts tif a reapoctablc citizen\nand man of business, folt to be advantageous, though ho had onjoyed it\nwell enough.\nIn all theso particulars he felt that\nhis affection* were loading him wUely,\nand that not merely love \u00E2\u0080\u0094 always\navowedly mure or loas folly\u00E2\u0080\u0094but discrimination aud sense were in hia\nchoice. Hut ho would have thought\nCatherine perfectly right about the\nadvantages on Hester's side, and he\nwould not havo been disgusted or\noffended by tbu suggestion that\nMrs, John had schemed to placo\nher daughter in the Whito House,\nand done her bost not to let such nn\neligible suitor Blip through her hands.\nAnd quite right, too, he would have\nsaid. He knew that ho would bo a\n\"catch\" for Hester, and ns sbo was no\nfool, it was inconceivable thnt she\nBhould uot jump nt him. This idea\ndid not ofl'ond him at all; that alio\nshould marry him because he could\ngive hur rank whioh otherwise alio\nwould not have, was a natural, sensible, perfectly legitimate reason to\nHarry.\nHad thero been a rival in the field\nwith greater things to offer ho would\nhnvo felt that ho had a right tu pause,\ntu think what was must to her advantage. Uut as thoro was nobody,\nho thought \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 probably- that Hester\nwould be n great foul if aho made\nany difficulty. Catherine had offend*\ned heraelf and offundod Edward by\nher suggestion, but sho would not have\noffended Harry, \"That is about it;\nthat is tho truo state of the case,\" he\nwould havo snid. And it iB possible\nthat he might havo represented that,\nnotwithstanding the fact that she had\nno munty, Hester would not be altogether a bad invoatmuiit; for ahe\nhad connections. Mrs. John might be\na silly little woman, hut alio was Sir\nJohn WeBtwuod's cousin, and n littlo\nmore bncking up from the country\nponplo would do the Vurnons no harm.\nTims ho took a very common-sonso\nview of ttio whole concern, thinking\nit perfectly reasonable thnt Mrs, John\nshould Bchoinc and that Hester Bhould\nconsider the advantages. He thought\noven that she had probably calculated\ntho lines of holding bnck, and that hor\nexpeditions with the old captain, her\ndisappearances nt tho time of his own\nvisits, were dono with a distinot intention of drawing n follow on, It\nmnde him vory angry, especially as\nmattors came to a crises, to Iind her\nnbsont, and only Mrs. John, vory nervous nnd apologetic, waiting for hiin\nwhen ho wont in; but nfter the tirat\nbitterness of the disappointment he\nwiili ready to allow thnt it wiib good\npolicy, and thnt ho was all the more\nanxious in the pursuit becauao she thus\nplayed with him nnd kopt him in uncertainty.\n(To lm Continued,)\nOIL CAKE,\nOATS,\nOAT MEAL,\nCORN MEAL,\nGRAIN SACKS,\nHAMS, BACON, LAUD, BUTTER,\nDRIED FRUIT, COFFEE\nAND SPICES.\nAgents for Pacifio Coast Steamship Co,\n(jaOte)\nGeneral Groceries,\nProvisions,\nDry Goods,\nHats and Gaps,\nBoots and Shoes,\nHardware,\nCrockery,\nTinware,\nDirect Importation\nr pnniniH\n\u00C2\u00AB WINE & SPIRIT MEROHANT.O\nluiiuhii\nBEGS TO INFORM TIIE RESID-\nents of New Westminster and vioinity that he is constantly receiving from\nEurope shipments of choice\nWines,\nSpirits,\n-AND-\nGENERAL DEALER,\nBrmnijir 1.\nDeBeck Bros. & Go,\nManufacturers and dealers In nll\nkinds of\nRough & Dressed Lumber.\nShingles, shakes, Pickets,\nAND TRAYS.\nWo Intend lo keep a full stock or\nSash,\nDoors,\nBlinds,\nMouldings\nAc, A-e.,Ae,, Inflict\nLMHMiE,\n(ly23yl)\nLiqueurs,\nEnglish Ales,\nLondon and\nDublin Stout,\nWhich lln will supply\nIN BOND or DUTY PAID,\nIn Quantities to Suit Customers.\nAlso, in constant receipt, direct from\nW. A. Gllby-i, London.\nFine Champagnes,\nSaumur's Claret,\nBurgundy,\nGenuine Sherry,\nFine old Ports\nand Sherries.\nE. BROWN,\ncox.xrjii3i-a. btbbbi,\nNew Westminster, B, 0.\nGOVERNMENT NOTICES.\nVTOTICE.\nNOTICE IH HEREBY OIVEN THAT\nthe iimlersl-med will sell liy I'ulillr\nAuction ut thu Uovcriimout Land Ofllce,\nNow \VcHtiiiliiHtcr,at 12o'clock, M.,TneH-\nilny, llio '.*Htl\u00C2\u00BB tli sixty days afterdate, I Intend making\nnpi'llcalion lo the Chief Commissioner of\nLands and Works fnr permission to purchase two unsurvcyed and unoccupied\nIslands,containing Ioo acres, more or less,\nand situate at the mouth of the Nortii\nArm of Frasor River, (South branch),\nSouthwesterly from Section H4, II. 5N., R.\n7 \V., New Westminster Distriot.\nJOHN HROCK.\nNew Westminster, 11. O., Oct. 7,1881.\n8oe2m \t\nNOTIOE.\nTIIEKHIIY GIVE NOT1CB THAT I\nI Intend to apply to the Chief Commls*\nsinner of Lauds and Works for permission\nto purchase the foi lowing described lands,\nsl.imtcd lu the District of Now Westminster:\nCommencing ut the NW corner of tho\nGovernment Reserve, situated on the\nsouthern side of Knglish Hay; thenoo due\nsouth, along the western boundary of said\nReserve, lo Its southwest comer; thonco\nduo west 110 chains, moro or less, lo the\neastern boundary nf Point Grey Rosorvo;\nthenee due north, along said eastern\nboundary, tn tho shoro of English Hay;\nIhenoo easterly, along shoro of English\nHay, to the place nf commencement, containing about WK) acres, more or loss.\nR.T.WILL1AMH.\nViotorin, R. C.Urd April, 1884. ap9*to\n-AND-\nPainting and Repairing\nneatly done.\nA STOCK OF COFFINS ALWAYS OK HAND\nnog-tto]\n10HNST0N & SMITH,\nri^piurroRH.\nA.\nONDERDONK,\nGkskkai, Managua.\nOffice of tub Contractor*,\n'Canadian Pacitio Railway,\nYale, Mareh 1, 188.1.\n1TOTIOB.\nIn lhe Estate of M. Mlrband. lair of Pap-\ncum, decease*! Intestine.\nALL PERRONS INDEBTED TO THE\nnbovo Estate are required to settle\nmien Indebtedness forthwith; and nil perilous having claims against tbo said Estate must send In proved iiceoniitsoil or\nbeforo the 8th November no.it.\nDatea8thOctohor,I88l:AjRNNS(\noc) ltd Administrator\nLegislative Assembly,\nPRIVATE BILLS.\nA LL APPLICATIONS FOR PRIVATE\nJ\_ Hills, properly llio subject of legislation by tiie Legislative Assembly of British Columbia, within tlie purview of the\n\"British Nortii America Aot,18tl7,\u00C2\u00BBwlioth*\nor for the erection of a Bridge, the making\nof a Rullroad, Turnpike Road, or Telegraph Line; tlio construction or Improvement of a Harbor, Canal, Look, Dam, nr\nSlide, oroiher like work; Mm granting of\na right of Ferry; tho Incorporation of any\nparticular trndo or calling, or of anyJoliit\nStock Company; orothorwlseforgrantlng\nlo any Individual or individuals any ox*\nelusive or pi'cullnr rights or privileges\nwhatever, or for doing any matter or thing\nwhich tn its operation would affect tho\nright h or property of other parties, or ro-\nlute to any particular class of tho community; or for making nny amendment\nof a like naturo to nny former Act,\u00E2\u0080\u0094Shall\nrequire a Notico, clearly nnd distinctly\nspecifying the naturo nnd object of Iho\napplication, to be published ns follows:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nA iiotieojn the Ih-ltUh Columbia Gutette,\nnml In one newspaper published In tho\nDistrict affected, or If thore bo no newspaper published therein, then in a newspii-\npel In the next nearest District In which\na newspaper Is published,\nsuch notice shall be continued In each\ncase for a period of nt least six wookB,dnr*\nI iik tin- interval of time between tho closo\nof the noxt'proceeding Session and the\nconsideration of the Petition,\nBefore any Pet ilinn, praying for leave lo\nbring lua Private Bill forllhe erect lon of n\nToll Bridge, Is presented to tho Houso, the\nperson or persons Intending to petition\nfor such Bill sball, upon giving theinotlco\nHb (treat Itemedv for Consumption In\nUn tirst or M'r-.atl mIukc.\nR. McGUIRE WILL AGREE to cure\n__ Consumption In its first or second\nstage under his advice and trentment, No\nroe required If not a pertoot cure obtained.\nDr. McGulre treats nil disease of the\nlungs without cod liver oil) Fellows'compound Syrup of Hypophosphfites, nr nny\nother medicines advertised for lung disease. Tho Doclor has made thin disease\nills specially for tlio last fifteen years.\nThorough examination and advice, $1*1.\nThoso who cannot visit Dr. McGulre nt\nClinton, B. C, should send a full and minute statement of their trouble witli 6i*>,\nand in return a full courso of medicino\nwill be forwarded. There are gooil comfortable hotels nt Olinton for patients, nud\ntho Climate Is tho finest in the world; nnd\nthe Doctor recommends those suffering\nfrum disease of tho lungs to como to Clinton for a short time,\nlOse-lm J. 8. McGUIRE, M. D.\nBUY THE BEST QUALITY\nUnion Ma Rubber Co'i\nJ. AltMSTltONU,\nAgent for New Westminster, j\nDR. SPINNEY & CHS]\nDISPENSARY,\nNO. 11 KEARNEY STREET, |\nSAN FRANCISCO, CAL.\nDR. HP1NNEY. well kn-wniMtl.i-r.mil. J\nder of tlm Montruid, 10. V.) Mi'ilk-tit Ii-Ml-1\ntutu, Rial Into I'nmrlelor of ttio BI'INNKYYIM.B I\nINFlItMAllY.gRould most m-i rot tally Inform!\nhid pntlt-iita ami Ua-aflllrlv-t peiu-ndly, tlmt liol\n\"till coi-tlnmm to treat claunlc nml normal -lin-f\ncaie* with nn|iitrallelcd fincceu.\nLADIES AND GENTLEMEN,\nHemember tlmt procniRllnation ii the thief ail\ntlinuio '\nCOMB AND DE HEALED.\nIt nml tern not whnt yuur l i-i.i.1>L-h mny bo, com*-\nAmi let (ho 1)'-ct'-r nxnmbio your awn. It wfll\nccit yon nothing for coniultntiou, ia jiluiutu cull\nand Hittlity ymirsi'lvei. wla-ther ths Doctor under -\nHtnmlH yonr riicii, JI liv can cure yon ho will tel\nyon no- If not, lio will Ml yon tlint, for liu wil.\nnot iimh-itiikc a cuff uttlctt lie I* continent of ef|\nfectluffttcure.\nPnrtioi nt n dlitanco wMilng trentment, by\nuendln-* (i'i nml n minute il-wi]|itlon of their\ntroiililcB will recolvj in return n tail courso ol\ntreiitineiit recurely pnckeil so ns not lo oiclto cu-\nrloslty.\nUK. SI'INNKY will (niiirnnteo to Inrfi-it Five\nHundred Dollum tor evury mm- of any kind or\nchnrncter which he undertnKi-i nml Hills lo cure.\nI'. H.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Ver iH-H-fl-*---* uf idiint standing, n full\ncuurso of medicines, snlUctent for u cure, with\nnil ItiRtmctloiiB, will he sent lo any address on\nreceipt nf (10.\nCall or Address\nDr. BP1KKKY tit CO.,\n9'JS-ly No. 11 Keitrne.v.st.,fiirjFniiia'l\"Cii,Cid.*|\nRUBBER BOOTS\nBeware of Imitations.\nBo sure the boots are stamped CUACK\nPHQOKon tho heels, uud have the l'ure\nGlim Springs on tbe foot and instep, whieh\nprevent their onieklngor breaking. We\nare now making them with Rubber and\nAsbestos Holes, which will mako them\nlast moro than twice as long ns any Hub*\nber Boots made. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nFOR SALE BY ALL DEALERS.\nAll kinds Rubber Bolting, Packing,\nHose, Springs, Clothing, Boots nnd Shoes,\nEtc. OOODYEAR RUBBER CO.\nIt. H. I'KABR, 8. M. RUlfYOK, AgOlltS,\naiiUMm Snn Francisco,\nHI\nAVING ESTABLISHED\nimmediate connection with\npaper manufacturers, wo ore\njnpand to furnish the various :\ngrades of paper, put up in quar*\nter-ream packages and upwards,\nnt much cheaper rates than formerly. A teat lot will prove\nthis fact. Our stook also of\nmiscellaneous books, with tho\nusual lines of gooda associated\nwith book stores and stationers,\nis always kept complete,\nT. N. HlBBEN k CO.,\niny3I*to / Gov't Ht, Viotoria.\nthe same time \"iind in the same manner.\n(live noMeo of the rales whioh tliey lutnnd\ni*i-M-iiii.-.l bvtiiu i-ri-c-cdliig rule, also at\n... .. _ m\t\niiotlno of tbe rates wnion nicy\nto ask, lhe extent of tho privilege, the\nheight of the undies, tho Interval tu-tweon\ntlieabiilnii-nisor piers fur the pnssagoof\nrafts nnd vessels, and mentioning nlso\nwhether tbey Intend to erect n drnwlirldgo\nor not, and the dimensions ofthe same.\nTHORNTON FELL,\nClork of the Lecislntlvo Assembly.\nso24te\nESQUIMALT ANDJANAIMO R.R\n< ont* u-toii**- ofho;,\nVictoria, Sopt, 32,1881.\nSCHEDULE OF WAGES\nFar While labor on lhe faqaimnlt\nand Nanaimo Railway.\nRock Foreman fl) no to 84 oo per dny\nEarth Foreman 2 fiO \" It 00 \"\nBridge Foreman ;i fit) \" 4 W \"\nBridgo Carpenters B 00 \"\nBlacksmiths, 1st class B SO '\nDrillers 2 00 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2' 2 2f> \"\nlaborers 1 7fi \" 2 00 -'\nHewers \u00C2\u00AB00 \"\nChoppers 1 7fi \"2 00 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nAll outside labor leu hours per dny,\n. Alt carpenters to furnish thoir own chest\ntools.\nAll employees And tliomsolvos board,\n\")\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0>' and lodging.\nBoarding Houses will ho convenient\nalong the lino.\nBoard, Mprr weok.\nIt will not bo compulsory for employees\nto board In thn company's bouses.\nWages will he paid monthly on the Kith\nof eaoh month. *\nORA1IAM A BUSK,\noo4te Contractors,\nDE. ALLEN'SJ\nPRIVATE DJHPEN8AHV,\nSO!' Kearny St., Sau Franelico, Cal J\nKmDuuiEti roa tint Hnminc and 8feot Cur-H\nor Oiieome, Nksvous and Smciai Uibbasis. ^\nTIIE GXrEDfirECIAUST,\nT\ll. AI.I.KN, AS Ifl WELL KNOWN. IS AI\nXJ ri---ular (jniiliiiiti'il Miyikliui, otlllCBtrd >\nHuwdoln CoUt'D*- nail Unlvmitj- of Miclilj-iin. II\nIiumiluvut-'d a llfitlinu to tlieatuily of tho trt-nt.l\nincut ami euro nf ilbieMU-a within lilt n|iccbdly. '\nAmi MIDDIX AUKDMEK, wlioareauflVrhiK ft**-\ntlii-i'tl'i'CtB of Youthful Iiiill-m-tlmu or 1'ici -\nIn iiiiittm-i-.vi-ni-n.NrHVul-iiaii.l I'iivbicai.Deiiii.iit. ]\nlaFotfSDR, Lost Masiihod, rmifimiuti of ldi'ai,i\ndull <\u00E2\u0096\u00A0)\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0, Avon-Inn to wciety, -linponitoncy, pbii-fl\nplus on tlio face, Inn of energy uml memory, fro-^\ni]iioncy->f uririntinif, nio. *\nMY HOSPITAL EXPRHFENCK\nHn-rlnii beon surgeon In chnra-o of IwoleinJliigl\nluii-iiltiil\"} ermMi-j mo to treat all prWato tronblei!\nWilli excellent remit Ih. I wlnli It -tUtlnctly imilrr-l\nitood tlmt I do not clulm to |iorfortn lnii>oMlbiH-|\ntioa, or lo lmvo mlrnculoii-i or miporniitiirid pow\u00C2\u00BBr. f\nI clulm only to tio a aklllmi nml iiiccow-fid Pliyil. ]\nclan nnd Surgeon, thorouphly Infunneil In niyl\nspecialty\u00E2\u0080\u0094 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nDISEASES UF MAN.\nAll, applying to tno will rccebru my lament I\nopinion of tboir QOtnplninU\u00E2\u0080\u0094No experimenting. 1 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nwill intnrAiitoo n piij-itlvfi euro in every cue 1 mi-\nil--rti-|u-. or forfeit $1,00(1. Con mi Itnl ion In ofllce I\nor by Idler MM ana iitrlctly private. 01iuri;esl\nreajKin-tlde. Thorough examination, InelmlluK i\nchemical nml mirrowoiilcal nnalyila of urine, anil I\nadvice, (6.00. Olflcoianira, 0 to3 dully, 0 lo Bl\nevening. Simtlny, IHn 12 only. Call or wlilreiu f\nDK. ALLRNi\n2'i}jt Kearney Hreet, San Vriinclnco, Cid.\n$$- ltemi'inlM-r, Hie Doctor lias n YMimiii.il\nCompousd, tlio roanlt of many yearn of Hpfriatl\npractice nml liatdatndy, which, under till -meciall\nuilvleo, lam nover failed o| tntcWi in the cure ofl\nLost Manhood, phobtatoiuiiiia, ate.\nTHE GREAT ENGLISH BEHEDY]\nIs n never-foiling]\nOnro for Nerv-j\nonaDebUtty.Ex-\nlinnstrd Vitality J\nof any kind,]\nWenknfss, Par*|\nalysli, I'rnsta-\ntorrlioen.nnd nil'\nthe terrible cf-1\n^\u00E2\u0080\u0094-m\u00E2\u0080\u0094-----\u00E2\u0080\u0094. '\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ofjouthful\nfollies, and exaessts lu maturer years, ,\nDR. MINTIK will agree to forfeit^\nFive Hundred Hollars for a ens* of,\nthis kind the Vital KwtOMtlve (under\nhis special adrlco nnd treatment) will not)\noiim, nr for anything Impure or injurious\nlomi-: !a It. |)K. MINTIK tronts all Dla-\neaecL mprcssftilly without mercury.]\nConKnUnllflll fl'CU. Thorough examl-1\nnation and ndvire, $5*00, Pttce of VItill 1\nKuNtomtlvr. $3-00 a bottle, or four?\ntimes tlio qtiniiitty, $10-00; sent to anyl\naddress iijmn rrci-l[it of |irlco, or C O. D,, J\nsecure from '.-'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0Ecrration, nnd in private!\nname H desired, by A. K. MINTIE.f\nM.D.\nThose who cannot vl'Rlt DR. MINTIK\nID Snn Franclrco should send a full and\nminute statement of their troubles with\n$25-00, nnd In return a full rourso of\nMedicine will he lorwarded, securely\nj-nrkftl. so as not to excite curiosity.\nAll orders for medicine 0. 0. D, muat\nbo accom-innicd with 91.00 (as a guar-f\nAnita of good fnith), which will be de-j\ndtictvd when the package Is shipped,\nSAMPLE HOTTLR FRKK.~&ent on|\napplication by tetter stating symptom*,I\nsex and ngc. Communications strictly!\nconfidential. , jnySMj\nII Kearney Slreel, Ran rraitcltco, OK"@en . "Publisher changes in chronological order: Robson Brothers (1882-1883) ; D. Robson & Co. (1883-1886) ; British Columbia Stationery and Printing Co. (1886-1887) ; British Columbian Printing Company (Limited) (1887-1888) ; Kennedy Brothers (1888-1890)."@en . "Newspapers"@en . "New Westminster (B.C.)"@en . "British_Columbian_1884_10_18"@en . "10.14288/1.0346379"@en . "English"@en . "49.206667"@en . "-122.910556"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "New Westminster : D. Robson & Co."@en . "Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Digitization Centre: http://digitize.library.ubc.ca/"@en . "BC Historical Newspapers"@en . "Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives."@en . "The British Columbian"@en . "Text"@en . ""@en .